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A CONCISE 



*ro 9d~ 



i OETICAL CONCORDANCE 



TO THE 



PRINCIPAL POETS OF THE WORLD 



EMBRACING 



ES, FIRST LINES, CHARACTERS, SUBJECTS, 
AND QUOTATIONS. 



COMPILED BY 



C H\A R L E S A . DUMEE 



ns 




piler of the Index to Harper's Magazine. "^7/ 

IP I 

1850-1880. 



i 






£» ?. 3 a 



pyright 1883, by John B. Aldi 






o .5 



:0 



OHN B. 



^w YORK: 

"PUBLISHER, 






$U 



-^SSTS, 



EXPLANATION OF REFERENCES. 



The following are the names of the poets referred to in this volume, and 
the abbreviations which are used in making references: 



Arn. 


Arnold, Edwin 


Lon. 


Longfellow, H. W. - 


Ayt. 


Aytoun, William E. 


Low. 


LowelL J. R. 


Bro. 


Browning, Mrs. E. B. 


Mac. 


Macaulay, T. B. 


Bry. 


Bryant, W. C. 


Mer. 


Meredith, Owen 




Burns, Robert 


Mil. 


Milton, John 




Byron, Lord 


Odys. 


Odyssey (Homer) 


c. 


Characters of plays 


Oss. 


Ossian 


Cam. 


Campbell, Thomas 


P. of. F. Pearls of the Faith (Arnold) 


Cha. 


Chaucer, Geoffrey 




Poe, Edgar A. 


Col. 


Coleridge, S. T. 




Pope, Alexander 


Cow. 


Cowper, "William 


Pro. 


Procter, Adelaide 


Cra. 


Crabbe, George 


Rog. 


, Rogers, .Samuel 




Dante 


Ros. 


Rossetti, D. G. 


Dry. 


Dryden, John 




Scott, Sir Walter 




Eliot, George 


Sch. 


Schiller, J. C. 


Fau. 


Faust (Goethe) 


Sha. 


Shakespeare 


Fav. 


Favorite Poems 


She. 


Shelley, P. B. 


Flo. 


Flowers, Poetry of 


Spe. 


Spenser, Edmund 


Goe. 


Goethe, J. W. von 


Tay. 


Taylor, Henry 


Ool. 


Goldsmith, Oliver 


Ten. 


Tennyson, Alfred 


Hem. 


Hemans, Mrs. F. D. 


Tho. 


Thomson, James 


Her. 


Herbert, George 


Vir. 


Virgil 


Hoi. 


Holmes, 0. W. 


Wes. 


Wesley, Charles 




Flood, Thomas 




White, Henry Kirke 




Indian Song of Songs (Arnold; 


i Whi. 


Whittier, J. G. 


Ing. 


Ingelow, Jean 


Wil. 


Willis, N. P. 




Keats, John 


Wor. 


Wordsworth, W. ' 



The editions of the poets referred to are principally those issued by the 
Publisher of this work, but include also the Household editions of Longfel- 
low Vhittier, Lowell, and Holmes, and the Riverside edition of Emerson, all 
bed by Houghton, Mifflin & Co. ; also the Household edition of Bryant, 
•hed by D. Appleton & Co. The Red-line and other editions of the poets 
;hed by Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., The John W. Lovell Co., R. Worth- 
x, and other xlmerican publishers, will commonly be found to corres- 
2losely to those issued by the publisher of this work. Thus the Poetical 
Com >rdance will serve as a convenient guide to most of the popular editions 
of the standard poets published in this country; and, indeed, in large degree 
it will serve as a ready means of reference to any edition of the poets quoted. 



■ *RE 




/ 

POETICAL CONCORDANCE. 



A bachelor of three-score - - - Sha. 112 

— banner with a strange device - - - Lon. 40 

— barking sound the shepherd hears - - Wor. 421 

— beam of tranquillity smiled in the west Moore 114 

— beast that wants discourse - - - Sha. 814 

— beautiful and happy girl ... - Whi. 141 

— beautiful elm, with a maidenly form - Flo. 498 

— beggar through the world am I - - - Low. 5 

— beggarly account of empty boxes - - Sha. 736 

— being breathing thoughtful breath - - Wor. 171 

— being who by adding love to peace - - Wor. 604 

— bird it is whose rapid motion - - - Sch. 197 

— birthday and now a day that rose - - Ing. 433 

— bishop by his neighbors hated - - - Pope 398 

— blessed lot hath he, who having past - Col. 27 

— blind man is a poor man - Lon. 94 

— blithe and bonny country lass - - Byron 257 

— blush as of roses Whi. 243 

— book came forth of late — a sonnet - - Wor. 230 

— book was writ of late Mil. 476 

— borough-bailiff who to law was trained - Cra. 43 

— boy a pigeon once possessed ... Q e. 231 

— boy caught sight of a rose in a bower - Flo. 349 

— brave man struggling in the storms - - Pope 93 

— breach is every day by many a mortal - Goe. 261 

— bridge of pearls its form uprears - - Sch. 193 

— bright-haired company of youthful slaves Wor. 356 

— broken altar, Lord Her. 106 

— broken cake, with honey sweet - - Moore 57 

— brook came stealing from the ground - Bry. 235 

— burning sky is o'er me ----- Bry. 212 

— calm and lovely paradise is Italy - - Wil. 226 

— captive thus to thee, my girl - - Moore 91 

— cat in distress She. 553 

— cat of yore (or else old iEsop lied) - - Scott 415 

— certain gentleman, whose yellow cheek - Hood 598 

— certain old sprite who dwells below - - Moore 641 

— change came o'er the spirit of my dream Byron 203 

— charge to keep I have ----- Wes. 248 

— chieftain to the Highlands bound - - Cam. 154 



A 6 

A child refused to go betimes - ■ - Goe. 129 

— choir of bright beauties in spring - - Dry. 539 

— Christian ! going, gone ! Whi. 50 

— city clerk, but gently born and bred - Ten. 372 

— clerk could tell what years have flown - Scott 68 

— cold uninterrupted rain - Lon. 272 

— combination and a form indeed - - - Sha. 832 

— consummation devoutly to be wished - Sha. 82G 

— Corinthian, a lad of mettle - Sha. 390 

— cottager leaned whispering by her hives Ing. 444 

— countenance in which did meet - - - Wor. 171 

— countenance more in sorrow than iu anger Sha. 815 

— crash of boughs ! one through them breaking Ing. 519 

— crazy book-case placed before - - - Hoi. 205 

— creature not too bright or good - - - Wor. 171 

— cry between the silences - Whi. 157 

— cup of hot wine with not a drop - - - Sha. 662 

— custom more honored in the breach - Sha. 816 

— dancing shape, an image gay - - - Wor. 171 

— Daniel come to judgment - Sha. 199 

— dark plume fetch me from yon blasted yew Wor. 330 

— day dream by the dark blue deep - - Bry. 255 

— day must come of ample retribution - - Rog. 64 

— deed of dreadful note - - - - - Sha. 798 

— deed without a name ----- Sha. 801 

— dish fit for the gods ----- Sha. 770 

— doleful case desires a doleful song - - Spe. 588 

— donkey, whose talent for burdens - - Moore 637 

— dragon-fly with beauteous wing - - - Goe. 228 

— faded blue-bell in a chest of tea - - Flo. 330 

— fair bell-flower sprang Goe. 27 

— falcon towering in her pride - - - Sha. 796 

— falling-star that shot across - Mer. 194 

— famous man is Robin Hood - - - Wor. 258 

— father sat by the chimney-post - - - Fav. 233 

— feast was in a village spread - Goe. 238 

— feasting presence full of light - - - Sha. 738 

— feeling of sadness and longing - Lon. 87 

— fellow of no mark nor likelihood - - Sha. 398 

— fellow says : I own no school - - - Goe. 222 

— few brief years have passed away - - Whi. 55 

— few more days preserve me here - - Wes. 240 

— fleet with flags arrayed ----- Lon. 376 

— flock of sheep that leisurely passed by - Wor. 229 

— flower that's wondrous fair - Flo. 516 

— foot more light, a step more true - - Scott 113 

— forest huge of spears, and thronging helms Mil. 29 

— forest waving on a single stem - - - Hoi. 17 

— fragment of a rainbow bright - - - Fav. 398 

— friend should bear his friend's infirmities - Sha. 781 



A garden here— May breath - Ten. 615 

— genial hearth, a hospitable board - - Wor. 375 

— gentle boy, with soft and silken lock - - Lon. 229 

— gentle knight, was pricking on the plain - Spe. 30 

— gentle page was Fridolin _-.-■■-. Sch. 173 

— gentle shepherd born in Arcady - - Spe. 628 

— gentle story of two lovers — a fragment - She. 504 

— girlish rose with shut leaves - - - Arn. 64 

— glimpse of blue immensity - Fav. 428 

— glorious people vibrated again - - - She. 420 

— gold fringe on the purpling hem - - - Whi. 404 

— golden-winged angel stood — a fragment - She. 501 

— good old country lodge ----- Flo, 343 

— goodly apple rotten at the heart - - Sha. 184 

— green and silent spot, amid the hills - - Col. 139 

— guardian angel o'er his life presiding - Rog. 194 

— guardian spirit sent from pitying heaven - Wor. 461 

— guid New-Year I wish thee, Maggie - - Burns 71 

— hand open as day for melting charity - - Sha. 430 

— handful of red sand, from the hot clime - Lon. 130 

— harmless necessary cat ----- Sha. 197 

— hater he came and sat by a ditch - - She. 574 

— health to dear woman. She bids us - - Hoi. 48 

— heap of low dark, rocky coast - - - Mer. 460 

— heavy heart, beloved, have I borne - - Bro. 159 

— hermit, or (if chance you hold - - Cow. 428 

— hero's bride? this desert bower - - - Flo. 182 

— high hope for a low heaven - - Sha. 137 

— hit, a very palpable hit ----- Sha. 845 

— horse, a horse ! my kingdom for - - Sha. 591 

— humming-bee, —a little tinkling rill - - Wor. 621 

— jest's prosperity lies in the ear - - - Sha. 159 

— kind of excellent dumb discourse - - - Sha. 14 

— knight of gallant deeds - Bro. 229 

— lake and a fairy boat Hood 144 

— legend that grew in the forest's hush - Low. 74 

— life of struggle, grief and pain - - - Fav. 137 

— lily flower, the old Egyptian's - - - Flo. 161 

— lily thou wast when I saw thee first - - Low. 9 

— lion among ladies is a most dreadful - - Sha. 168 

— little bird in the air Lon. 258 

— little changeling spirit ----- Pro. 286 

— little fire is quickly trodden out - - Sha. 549 

— little learning is a dangerous thing - - Pope 46 

— little longer in the light, love - - - Mer. 397 

— little longer yet — a little longer - - - Pro. 151 

— little month, or ere those shoes were old - Sha. 814 

— little more than kin and less than kind - Sha. 813 

— little onward lend thy guiding hand - Mil. 351 
'— little past the village - - - ...... Pro. 95 



A little rose bloomed in the way - - - Fav. 280 

— little, upright, pert, tart, tripping wight Burns 106 

— little while, a little love - Eos. 147 

— living dead-man ; this pernicious slave - Sha. 108 

— lottery, a lottery - Moore 300 

— love-lorn maid, at some far distant time - Wor. 331 

— lovely being scarcely formed or molded Byron 492 

— lovely form there sate beside my bed - - Col. 212 

— lovely, stately, lustrous maid - - - P. of F. 61 

— maiden blush o'er every feature - Sch. 289 

— man can die but once ----- Sha. 424 

— man I am crossed with adversity- - - Sha. 34 

— man may fish with a worm - - - Sha. 834 

— man may see how this world goes - - Sha. 872 

— man of my kidney - - - - - Sha. 58 

— man that fortune's buffets - Sha. 827 

— man too happy for mortality - - - Wor. 115 

— man whose blood is very snow broth - - Sha. 70 

— man with households twain - - Goe. 370 

— man's a man for a' that - Fav. 123 

— marchaunt whilom dwelled at Seint Denys Cha. 389 

— master of a country school - - - - Goe. 243 

— meadow where the grass was deep - - Ing. 100 

— mere anatomy Sha. 108 

— merry heart goes all the day - - - Sha. 319 

— midnight black with clouds in the sky - Bry. 160 

— mightier wizard far than I Scott 426 

— mighty and a mingled throng - - - Fav. 225 

— mighty hand, from an exhaustless urn - Bry. 344 

— mighty hunter and his prey was man - Pope 98 

— mighty oak here ruined lies - - - Sch. 301 

— mighty realm is the land of dreams - - Bry. 215 

— mighty whirling wheel of strife and stress Arn. 146 

— milk-white hind, immortal and unchanged Dry. 196 

— millennium at hand !— I'm delighted - Moore 629 

— millstone and the human heart - - - Lon. 94 

— mind intolerant of lasting peace - - Wor. 671 

— miser traversing his house - Cow. 518 

— mist was driving down the British channel Lon. 213 

— monarch on his death-bed lay - - - Hem. 407 

— month, sweet little ones, is past - - Wor. 81 

— mother's pride, a father's joy - - - Scott 198 

— motion and a spirit that impels - - Wor. 189 

— mount, not wearisome and bare and steep Col. 61 

— myrtle fairer than e'er grew - - - Flo. 118 

— name unmusical to the Volscians' ears - Sha. 678 

— narrow girdle of rough stones - - - Wor. 138 

— needle small as small can be - Cow. 601 

— needless Alexandrine ends the song - Pope 50 

— needy hollow-eyed, sharp-looking wretch - Sha. 108 



A night had passed away among the hills - Fav. 87 

— nightingale that all day long - - - Cow. 391 

— noble life is in thy care (E. H. W.) - Whi. 396 

— noble theme demands a noble verse - - Cow. 399 

— pale dream came to a lady fair - - She. 403 

— pard-like spirit, beautiful and swift - - She. 371 

— parish priest was of the pilgrim train - Dry. 430 

— party of friends, all light-hearted and gay Mer. 226 

— peasant to his lord yearly court - - - Cow. 572 

— pen — to register ; a key - Wor. 428 

— perfect woman is not a coin - Tay. 305 

— perfect woman, nobly planned - - - Wor. 171 

— pilgrim when the summer day - Wor. 153 

— pious magistrate ! sound his praise - - Whi. 192 

— pipe for fortune's finger to sound what stop Sha. 827 

— plague o' both your houses - Sha. 726 

— plague of all cowards ----- Sha. 391 

— plague of sighing and grief - - - Sha. 393 

— plague on your languages, German and Norse Sha. 415 

— plague upon the people fell - - - Ten. 442 

— plain built house, after so long a stay - - Dry. 483 

— plan the muses entertained - - - G-oe. 236 

— pleasant and a winsome tale - - - Lon. 304 

— pleasant music floats along the Mere - Wor. 360 

— pleasing form, a firm, yet cautious mind - Pope 342 

— plentiful lack of wit Sha. 822 

— poet cannot strive for despotism - - - Low. 23 

— poet could not sleep aright - - • Bro. 244 

— poet ! he has put his heart to school - - Wor. 247 

— poet once the Spartans led to fight - - Dry. 514 

— poet's cat, sedate and grave - Cow. 484 

— point of life between my parents' dust - Wor. 398 

— pool was once congealed with frost - - Goe. 238 

— poor infirm, weak and despised - - Sha. 862 

— poor old king, with sorrow for my crown - Hood 181 

— pore wydow, somdel stope in age - - Cha. 478 

— portal as of shadowy adamant - - - She. 469 

— power is on the earth and in the air - Bry. 107 

— power which builds, unbuilds, and builds Arn. 118 

— prentys dwelled whilom in oure citee - - Cha. 125 

— presence both by night and day - - Low. 346 

— prologue? Well, of course, the ladies know Hoi. 166 

— proper man as one shall see - - - Sha. 164 

— quiet, simple man was Abel Keene - - Cra. 454 

— race of nobles may die out - Low. 101 

— raven while with glossy breast - - - Cow. 392 

— remote sky, prolonged to the sea's brim - Eos. 154 

— requiem! and for whom? - - - -Hem. 426 

— rich reward it shall be, a full payment - P. of F. 104 

— rock there is whose homely front Wor. 203 ; Fav. 126 



10 



A Roman master stands on Grecian ground - Wor. 276 

— rose once grew within - Bro. 273 

— rose with all its sweetest leaves yet folded Byron 492 

— rosebud by my early walk - - - Burns 206 

— ruined city in the heart - Fav. 109 

— sad man on a summer day - - - Bro. 70 

— saint in crape is twice a saint in lawn - Pope 227 

— schoolboy's tale, the wonder of an hour - Byron 290 

— score of years had come and gone - - Whi. 385 

— second Daniel, a Daniel, Jew - - - Sha. 200 

— sensitive plant in a garden grew She. 336 ; Flo. 503 

— serious Toyman in the city dwelt - - Cra. 136 

— servant of the living God is dead ! - - Wil. 298 

— shepherd's boy (he seeks no better name) Pope 31 

— shepherd's boy (no better do him call) - Spe. 522 

— ship comes foaming up the bay - - - Hoi. 93 

— shovel of his ashes took — a fragment - She. 501 

— simple child that lightly draws - Wor. 83 

— single rose is shedding there - - - Flo. 99 

— slender tree upon a height in lonely - - Flo. 190 

— slumber did my spirit seal - - - Wor. 172 

— smiling look she had - - - - - Pro. 75 

— snapper-up of unconsidered trifles - - Sha. 318 

— soldier of the legion lay dying in Algiers - Fa v. 371 

— soldier of the Union mustered out - - Lon. 367 

— something light as air — a look - - -Moore 466 

— song for the death day of the brave - Hem. 412 

— sonnet is a moment's monument - - - Ros. 22Q 

— sorrow wet with early tears - Pro. 145 

— soul as full of worth, as void of pride - - Pope 334 

— soul by resignation sanctified - - - Wor. 496 

— sound as if from bells of silver - - - Whi. 369 

— sound of music from amidst the hills - Hem. 389 

— sound of tumult troubles all the air - - Whi. 214 

— sound of woe in Salem, mournful cries - Hem. 112 

— southland Jenny, that was right bonny - Burns 336 

— spade, — a rake, — a hoe! - Hood 132 

— spaniel, Beau, that fares like you - - Cow. 502 

— Spartan, his companion slain - - - Cow. 513 

— Spartan, 'scaping from the fight - Cow. 513 

— spirit haunts the year's last hours Ten. 14 ; Flo. 471 

— spirit passed before me, I beheld - - - Byron 196 

— spirit there is, whose fragrant sigh - Moore 385 

— spirit, yet a woman too - Wor. 171 

— splendid opportunity to die? - Cow. 328 

— stage where every man - Sha. 182 

— still, small voice spake unto me - - - Ten. 95 

— still-soliciting eye, and such a tongue - Sha. 849 

— still, sweet, placid, moonlight face - -. Hoi. 85 

— storm was coming, but the winds - - Ten. -287 



11 A 

A strain of music closed the tale - - Lon. 263 

— stranger came one night to Yussouf 's tent Low. 362 

— stranger sent from burning lands - - Mer. 238 

— stranger's purpose in these lays - - Cow. 459 
«— stream to mingle with your favorite Dee Wor. 243 
■— strength thy service cannot tire - - Whi. 70 
>— strong and mighty angel - - - - Whi. 314 

— sudden conflict rises from the swell - Wor. 374 

— sunny shaft did I behold - Col. 272 

— sweeter draught from a fairer hand - Whi. 205 

— swoon that breaks is the whelming wave - Eos. 184 

— sword is on the land ! - - - - - Hem. 470 

— sylph, as gay as ever sported - - Moore 599 

— tale of the times of old ! - - - - Oss. 189, 222 

— temple to friendship, said Laura, enchanted Moore 521 

— the lads o' Thorniebank - - - Burns 205 

— thing of beauty is a joy forever - - Keats 7 

— thought lay like a flower - - - Bro. 86 

— thousand blushing apparitions - Sha. 126 

— thousand oracles divine - Wes. 330 

— thousand years scarce serve to form - Byron 299 

— time like this, a busy, bustling time - - Cra. 249 

— touch, a kiss ! the charm was snapt - Ten. 103 

— track of moonlight on a quiet lake - - Whi. 162 

— trader I am to the African shore - - Cow. 451 

— traveler on the skirt of Sarum's plain - - Wor. 33 

— traveler through a dusty road - - - Flo. 469 

— trinket made like a heart, dear - Pro. 338 

— triple health to friendship - Hoi. 133 

— trouble not of clouds, or weeping rain - Wor. 383 

— tuft of evening primroses - Flo. 63, 110 

— type and shadow of an awful truth - - Wor. 683 

— valiant flea that dares - - Sha. 454 

— very ribbon in the cap of youth - Sha. 838 

— very valiant trencher man - Sha. Ill 

— vicar died and left his daughter poor - - Cra. 124 

— violet blossomed on the green - - - Flo. 43 

— violet in the youth of primy nature - - Sha. 815 

— vision as of crowded city streets - - Lon. 365 

— voice from long expected thousands - - Wor. 373 

— voice from Scio's isle ----- Hem. 310 

— voice from time departed yet floats - - Hem. 246 

— voice that in the distance far away - - Tay. 62 

— volent tribe of bards — a sonnet - Wor. 233 

— wail was heard around the bed - - Hem. 143 

— wanderer, Wilson, from my native land - Hood 415 

— wealthy lord of far-extended land - - Cra. 147 

— weary lot is thine, fair maid - Scott 201 

— weary month has wandered o'er - - Scott 394 

— weight of awe, not easy to be borne - - Wor. 409 



id 12 

A whirl-blast from behind the hill - - Wor. 142 

— wilderness is rich with liberty - Wor. 450 

— willow garland thou didst send - - " Flo. 144 

— wind came up out of the sea - Lon. 223 

— winged goddess, clothed in vesture - - Wor. 293 

— wit with dunces and a dunce with wits - Pope 166 

— wit's a feather and a chief a rod - - Pope 217 

— woman is too slight a thing to trample - Mer. 32 

— woman moved is like a fountain troubled Sha. 252 

— woman of her gentle sex the seeming paragon Fav. 184 

— woman of soft speech and gracious smile Wor. 677 

— woman's face with nature's own hand painted Sha. 1030 

— woodman whose rough heart was out of tune She. 456 

— word and a blow - - - - - - Sha. 725 

— wreath of vervain heralds wear - - Flo. 210 

— wreathed garland of deserved praise - - Her. 289 

— wretched soul bruised with adversity - Sha. 95 

— wrinkled, crabbed man they picture thee - Flo. 286 

— ye wha live by sowps o' drink - - - Burns 89 

— year ago thy cheek was bright - - - Mer. 269 

— young fig-tree, its form lifts high - - Goe. 228 

— young man called Melibeus - Cha. 414 

— youth impelled by burning thirst - - Sch. 185 

— youth light-hearted and content - - - Lon. 37 

— youth of frolics, an old age of cards - - Pope 238 

— youth to fortune and to fame unknown - Fav. 34 

— youth too certain of his power to wade - Wor. 403 

— youth went forth to exile, from a home - Hem. 144 
Aar, Fall of the, — Handec — a sonnet - - Wor. 295 
Aaron --------- Her. 276 

— a Moor, c. in Titus Andronicus - - Sha. 688 

Abaser, The P. of F. 62 

Abbott is painting me so true - Cow. 497 

Abbott's portrait, On Cow. 497 

Abdullah, c. in Siege of Valencia - - - Hem. 434 

Abel Keene - Cra. 454 

Abelard, Eloisa to Pope 109 

Abencerrage, The Hem. 64 

Aberfeldy, Birks of — a song - - - Burns 204 

Abergavenny, Lord, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 

Abhorson, c. in Measure for Measure - - Sha. 67 

Abiit senex ! Periit senex amabilis - - Cow. 470 

Abou Ben-Adhem and the Angel. (Hunt.) - Fav. 394 

Above all Greek, above all Roman fame - Pope 298 

— and below ------- Low. 79 

— below, in sky and sod - - - Whi. 237 

— the clouds - Ing. 507 

— thy child I saw thee bend - - - Mer. 200 
Abraham, a servant, c. in Romeo and Juliet - Sha. 712 

— Davenport - - Whi. 312 



13 



A 

Ad 



Abraham, Sacrifice of - - - - Wil. 12 

Abraham's bread - P. of F. 115 

— offense - - - - - - - P. of F. 40 

Abruptly paused the strife ; the field - - Wor. 284 

Absalom -------- Wil. 28 

— and Achitophel - - - - - - Dry. 86 

Absence - - - Cam. 229 

— a farewell ode - Col. 35 

— Bliss of — a song - Goe. 40 

— from thee — as self from self - Eog. 192 

— Remarks on poem entitled - - - -Burns 324 
Absent or present, still to thee - Byron 249 

— thee from felicity awhile - Sha. 845 

Absentee, To an - Hood 153 

Abuse of monastic power — a sonnet - - Wor. 366 

Abuses of lay-preaching _._--. Wes. 172 

Abydos, After swimming to - - - Byron 243 

— Bride of ------ - Byron 15 

Accept a miracle instead of wit - - - Pope 397 

— loved nymph, this tribute due - - Tho. 467 

— the gift a friend sincere - - - -Burns 93 
Accompanying manuscripts to a friend - Whi. 129 
According to fates and destinies - - - Sha. 186 
Accountant, The - - - - - P. of F. 120 
Accuse me not, beseech thee - Bro. 156 

— me thus : that I have scanted all - - Sha. 1042 
Achilles, a Greek prince, c. in Troil. and Cress. Sha. 622 

— and Agamemnon, Contention of - - Iliad 49 
reconciled ------- Iliad 394 

— Grief of Iliad 377 

— over the trench - Ten. 724 

— Shield of, described ----- Iliad 389 

— wrath to Greece the direful spring - - Iliad 49 
Ackerman, Frantz, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 
Acquiescence of pure love (Mme. Guyon) - Cow. 627 
Acquiring his first spot of ground - - Wes. 238 
Acquittal of the bishops — a sonnet - - . - Wor. 373 
Across the frozen marshes - Whi. 213 

— the sea I heard the groans - - - - Whi. 283 

— the stony mountains Whi. 79 

Acrostics : Electricity is the breath of God - Fav. 289 

— Emilie Marshall Wil. 291 

— Frances Sargent Osgood - Poe 76 
Act well your part, there all the honor lies - Pope 215 

Actseon - - Sch. 312 

Action is transitory — a step, a blow - - Wor. 66 

Actors— " Players " ------ Cra, 394 

Acts, On passages in book of- - -Wes. 175, 182, 302 

Adamicos - Hoi. 236 

— patrem - - - - - - - - Mil. 546 



Adah i a 

After A-t 

Adah, c. in Cain Byron 105 

Adam, c. in Cain - - - - . - - Byron 105 

— a servant in As You Like It - - • Byron 205 

— (Monkes Tale) Cha. 456 

— A— 'sprayer ------ -Burns 138 

— quitting Eden - - - - - - P. of F. 154 

— Scrivener, if ever it thee befall - - - Cha. 603 
Adams, John Quincy (E. H. W.) - - - Whi. 396 
Addison, Joseph, Epistle to Pope 260 

Narcissus, Death of- Flo. 48 

Soul, The ------ Fav. 145 

Addison's Cato, Prologue to - - - - Pope 92 

Additional poems ----- Hoi. 27, 293 

Address from spirit of Cockermouth Castle Wor. 398 

— for opening of Fifth Avenue theater - - Hoi. 277 

— of Beelzebub- ------ Burns 83 

— spoken by Miss Fontenelle on her benefit Burns 147 

— to daughter Dora - Wor. 158 

— to Edinburgh - - - - - - -Burns 101 

— to the comet (anon.) - - - - ■ - - Fav. 135 

— to the deil ------ - Burns 53 

— to the shade of Thomson - Burns 137 

— to the toothache Burns 118 

— to the unco guid ------ Burns 78 

— to the woodiark — a song - Burns 283 

— to village scholars ----- Wor. 489 

Adelaide, c. in Fall of Robespierre - - - Col. 382 

Adelgitha- ------- Cam. 194 

Adeline- - - - - - - - - Ten. 15 

Adequacy — a sonnet ----- Bro. 88 

Adhuc madentes rore squalebant genes - - Mil. 541 

Adieu ------- Eos. 289 

— a heart warm, fond adieu - - - -Burns 201 

— adieu, my native shore - Byron 280 

— Mignonne, ma belle - - - - - Mer. 234 

— Rydalian laurels — a sonnet - - - Wor. 397 

— sweet bard, to each fine feeling true - - Gol. 64 

— the woods and water's side - - - Cam. 245 
Admire not that I gained the prize - - - Scott 530 
Admiring nature in her wildest grace Burns 108 ; Fav. 195 
Admonition — a sonnet ----- Wor. 226 

— an epigram Goe. 22Q 

Admonitory sentences ----- White 47 

Adon --------- Mer. 461 

Adonais : an elegy on death of Keats - - She. 365 

Adonis, Death of — fragment of elegy - - She. 534 

— Lament for -.-.__ g r0# 139 

Adopted child - - Hem. 408 

Ad own winding Nith — a song - Burns 256 ; Flo. 515 

Adrian, a lord in Tempest - - - - Sha. 1 



-i ~ Adah 

10 After 

Adriana, c. in Comedy of Errors - - - Sha. 93 

— Van Merestyn, c, in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 
Adrian's address to his soul - Byron 132 
Adulteress, The ------ P. of F. 151 

Advance — come forth from thy Tyrolean 

ground ------- Wor. 278 

Advancing age, In - - - - - - Wes. 135 

Advantages to be derived from sending a trav- 
eler into Asia - - - - - - Gol. 464 

Advent, For - - - - - - - Wes. 59 

Adventure, An (Italy) ----- Eog. 132 

Adventures of the Cicons ----- Ody. 121 

Adversity's sweet milk, philosophy - - Sha. 728 

Advertisement of lost day. (Mrs. Sigourney.) Fav. 245 

Advice -------- Cra. 147 

— to a reckless youth. (Ben Jonson.) - - Fav. 323 
Ae day as death, that grusome carl - - Burns 139 

— fond kiss, and then we sever - - -Burns 232 
iEgeon, c. in Comedy of Errors - - - Sha. 93 
JEgistus, c. in Clytemnestra - Mer. 348 
iEgle, beauty and poet, has two little crimes Byron 253 
iEmilia, c. in Comedy of Errors - - - Sha. 93 
JEmilius, c. in Titus Andronicus - - Sha. 688 
iEneas, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - - Sha. 622 
^Eneid, The (Dryden's translation) - - Vir. 123 

— Translations from the - - - Hoi. 320 ; Cow. 535 
iEolian harp, On hearing an — a sonnet - White 315 
iEolus, Adventures with '•--■-- Ody. 136 
bolus's harp, On - - - - - - Tho. 444 

^Erial rock, whose solitary brow — a sonnet - Wor. 228 

^Eschylus, From Prometheus of - - - Byron 134 

^Estiration -------- Hoi. 171 

iEswin, Van, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - Tay. 30 

.^Ethiopissa ambit cestum diversi coloris- - Her. 588 

Afar away the light that brings cold cheer - Ros. 304 

Affections are as thoughts to her - - - Fav. 184 

— Poems on the Wor. 93 

— Songs of the - - - - - - - Hem. 200 

Afflicted Protestant lady, To an - - - Cow. 459 

Affliction, - - - - Her. 128, 145, 158, 178, 186 

— may one day smile again - - - - Sha. 137 

— of Margaret ------- Wor. Ill 

Afflictions of England — a sonnet - - - Wor. 371 

— sanctified ------- Cow. 75 

— sons are brothers in distress - - - Burns 64 
African chief, The ------ Bry. 101 

Africans, Pity for poor ----- Cow. 449 

After a lecture on Keats - - - - - Hoi. 129 

— a lecture on Moore - - - - - Hoi. 128 
•-a lecture on Shelley - - - • - Hoi. 129 



i£ er 16 

After a lecture on Wordsworth - - - Hoi. 127 

— a tempest Bry. 66 

— death in Arabia ------ Arn. 165 

— dinner poem — Terpsichore - Hoi. 64 

— election - - Whi. 351 

— life's fitful fever he sleeps well - - - Sha. 798 

— long storms and tempests 1 sad array - Spe. 698 

— my death I wish no other - Sha. 614 

— our ^Esop's fable shown to-day - - Dry. 521 

— sensations — a song - Goe. 44 

— so long a race as I have run - - - Spe. 701 

— so long an absence - Lon. 229 

— solution of my doubt, thy Charles - - Dante 271 

— that Constantine the eagle turned - Dante 260 

— the battle - Moore 230 

— the burial ------- Low. 353 

— the fire- - - - - - - - Hoi. 246 

— the slumber of the year - - - Flo. 43 

— their courteous greetings - Dante 142 

— these vernal rains Goe. 82 

— thought Wor. 296, 333 

Aftermath Lon. 231 

Afternoon at a parsonage - Ing. 116 

— in February - Lon. 87 

— of her best days Sha. 577 

— Sura of the - P. of F. 170 

Afterward Wes. 30 

Af ton water — a song - - -Bums 199 

Again mine eyes were fixed on Beatrice - Dante ?14 

— new tumults in my breast - Pope 514 

— rejoicing nature sees ----- Burns 198 

— the silent wheels of time - - - -Burns 103 

— to Satan's yoke I bow - Wes. 260 

— to the battle, Achaians Cam. 175 

— we lift our voice - Wes. 147 

Against my love shall be, as I am now - - Sha. 1035 

— my will I am sent to bid you - - - Sha. 120 

— self -slaughter there is a prohibition - - Sha. 959 

— that time, if ever that time come - - Sha. 1034 

— the sunset's glowing wall - Whi. 85 
Agamemnon, c. in Clytemnestra - - - Mer. 348 

— c. in Troilus and Cressida - Sha. 622 

— Epilogue to Tho. 475 

Agassiz, Louis, Farewell to Hoi. 294 

Fiftieth birthday of Lon. 224 

Prayer of Whi. 383 

Agatha -------- Eliot 25 

Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale - Sha. 919 

— remembers with a sigh - Fav. 24 

— The. (Hermann and Dorothea, VI.) - - Goe. 3*7 



•Xh After 

1 ■ Ah 

Age twine thy brows with fresh spring flowers Wor. 260 

Aged Indian, The ------ Hem. 333 

Ages, The -------- Bry. 11 

— elapsed ere Homer's lamp appeared - - Cow. 144 

Agnes Hoi. 89 

Agony, The ------- Her. 118 

Agricultural celebration, Ode for - - - Bry. 46 

— exhibition, For an Whi. 249 

Agrippa, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 

Aguecheek, Sir Andrew, c. in Twelfth Night - Sha. 281 

Ah, broken is the golden bowl - - - Poe 58 

— cease thy tears and sobs, my little life ! - Col. 43 

— Chloris ! since it may na be - - - Burns 265 

— Clemence ! when I saw thee last - - - Hoi. 78 

— County Guy, the hour is nigh - - - Scott 444 

— dear, but come thou back to me - - Ten. 204 

— dear one, we were young so long - - Eos. 288 

— fading joy ! how quickly art thou past - Dry. 550 

— faint are her limbs, and her footstep is weary She. 556 

— for pity ! will rank winter's rage - - - Spe. 524 

— friend ! 'tis true — this truth - - - Pope 369 

— gentle dames ! it gars me greet - - Burns 131 

— gentle, fleeting, wavering sprite - - Byron 132 

— gentle, gracious dove ----- Wes. 193 

— God forgive those that are dead - - P. of F. 77 

— hapless man, thy perjured vow - - Burns 325 

— here it is ! the sliding rail - Hoi. 178 

— how short are the days ! How soon - - Lon. 299 

— how the human mind wearies herself - Cow. 576 

— life ! sweet drop drowned in a sea - Byron 265 

— little thought she, when, with wild - - Rog. 243 

— love was never yet without - - - Byron 251 

— mater, quo te deplorum fonte? - - - Her. 536 

— may'st thou ever be what now thou art Byron 278 

— me ! ah, me ! when thinking of the years Lon. 394 

— me ! ah, woe is me ! ----- fi . 97 

— me ! O Satan ! Satan ! - - - - - Dante 22 

— me ! those old familiar bounds ! - - - Hood 449 

— me! when shall I marry me? - - - Goi. 140 

— my dear angry Lord Her. 273 

— not by Cain or Isis, famous streams - Col. 161 

— once again the longleft wires among - White 221 

— ope, lord Gregory, thy door ! - Burns 250 

— poor Louise ! the livelong day - - - Scott 454 

— reign, wherever man is found - Cow. 618 

— see the virgin rose, how sweetly - Flo. 97 

— see whose fayre thing -."-'-■'- Flo. 99 

— sweet, thou little knowest how - - - Hood 179 

— the poor shepherd's mournful fate - - Burns 319 

— think how one compelled for life - - - Wor. 444 

9 



Ah 1 q 

Aldwyth - 1 ° 

Ah, triumph sorrow, there is no one string - Byron 265 

— urged too late ! from beauty's bondage iree Tho. 467 

— what pleasant visions haunt me - - Lon. 126 

— when the body, round which in love - - Wor. 358 

— where are they, who heard - - - Moore 666 

— where is Palafox? — a sonnet - - - Wor. 280 

— wherefore should my weeping maid suppress Cow. 33 

— wherefore with infection should he live - Sha. 1036 

— whither, love, wilt thou now carry me? - Spe. 655 

— who can say ------ White 369 

— who'll e'er those days restore - - - Goe. 44 

— why deceive yourselves ! by no means fit - Wor. 440 

— why hath nature too so hard a heart - Spe. 692 

— why with tell-tale tongue reveal - - - Rog. 339 

— ye gods ! ye great immortals - - - Goe. 208 

Ahasuerus, c. in Hellas She. 377 

Ahriman, in Talisman - - - - - Scott 449 

Aid, glorious martyrs, from your fields of light Wor. 369 

Aiken, Andrew, Epistle to - - Burns 164 

— Robert ------- Burns, 351, 353 

— Robert. Epitaph on - Burns 185 

Aikman, Mr., Death of Tho. 428 

Ailsa Crag in an eclipse — a sonnet - - Wor. 404 

Ainslie, Miss, Epigram to - - - - Burns 177 

— Robert, Letters to, Burns 378, 380, 389, 401, 407, 409, 426 

436, 442, 471, 489 

Air-drawn dagger - Sha. 799 

— The - - Lon. 344 

Airey-Force Valley ------ Wor. 169 

Airs that wander and murmur round - - Bry. 144 

Airy del Castro was as bold a knight - - Cow. 97 

— fairy Lilian - - Ten. 8 

Aix-la-Chapelle — a sonnet - Wor. 293 

Ajax, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - - Sha. 622 

— Acts of - Iliad 312 

Akers, Elizabeth. See Allen, Mrs. E. A. 

Al Aaraaf -------- p e 131 

— Aaraf saith— the seventh of the book - P. of F. 184 

— Akhaf, Sura of - - - - - - P. of F. 80 

— Fresco Low. 339 

— I'hlas - - - P. ofF. 134 

— Kauthar, Sura of - - - - - P. of F. 82 
Alack, there lies more peril in thine eye - Sha. 720 

— 'tis melancholy theme to think - - - Hood 316 

— what poverty my muse brings forth - Sha. 1040 
Alacrity in sinking ------ sha. 57 

Aladdin -------- Low. 344- 

Alarbus, son of Tamora, c. in Titus Andron. - Sha. 688 

Alaric in Italy Hem. 107 

Alas ! alas ! not ours the grace - Scott 426 



19 



Ah 
Aldwyth 



Alas ! for the rarity of Christian charity Fav. 140 

— good friend, what profit can you see - - She. 432 

— how light a cause may move - - - Moore 465 

— how much that seemed immortal truth - Hoi. 201 

— my boy, that thou shouldst die - - Wil. 30 

— my son, you little know - - - Burns 314 

— poor death, where is thy glory - - - Her. 271 

— poor Yorick ! I knew him - Sha. 841 

— so long! ------- Ros. 288 

— the flames of an unhappy lover - - - Hood 339 

— the little joy to man allowed - - - Wor. 29 

— the love of women, it is known - - Byron 358 

— the moon should ever beam - - - Hood 152 

— 'tis true I have gone here and there - - Sha. 1041 

— we cannot draw habitual breath - - Low. 400 

— what boots the long laborious - - - Wor. 278 

— what differs more than man from man - Wor. 700 

— when seeming to repent - Wes. 244 

— why is genius forever at strife - - - Mer. 31 
Alastor, or the spirit of solitude - - - She. 84 
Alban hills, From the — a sonnet - - - Wor. 314 
Albano, an usher, c. in Tasso - She. 457 

— At— a sonnet - Wor. 314 

Albany, Bonny lass of — a song - - - Burns 205 

— Duke of, c. in King Lear - Sha. 847 
Albeit all life is linked and kin - Arn. 94 
Albert, c. in Otho the Great - - - Keats 333 

— Graeme -------- Scott 37 

Alberti, c. in Vesoers of Palermo - - Hem. 493 

Albion and Albanius, Prologue to - Dry. 501 

— by the nymph attended ... - Dry. 554 

— loved of gods and men Dry. 555 

Album, From an - Goe. 206 

— In an Cow. 487; Sch. 285, 286 

— leaf, On an - - - Hem. 264 

— verses -------- Hoi. 169 

Albumazar, Prologue to Dry. 509 

Alcandar and Septimius, Story of - Gol. 391 

Alcayde of Molina ------ Bry. 145 

Alchemist, Dying ------ Wil. 211 

Alcibiades, c. in Timon of Athens - - Sha. 741 

Alcinous, Court of ----- - Odys. 96 

Alcman, From Greek of - - - - - Cam. 126 

Alden, John - Lon. 198 

Aldred, c. in Harold Ten. 615 

Aldrich, Thomas Bailey. Ballad of Babie Bell Fav. 442 

Lycidas ------- Fav. 40 

Our colors at Fort Sumter - - - Fav. 132 

Song, " The chestnuts shine " - - Fav. 107 

Aldwyth, dtr. of king of Wales, c. in Harold Ten. 615 



Alen^on O n 

Alencon, duke of, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - Sha. 469 

Alexander II. of Russia — a sonnet - - - Eos. 298 

— a servant, c. in Troilus and Cressida - Sha. 622 

— and Caesar and Henry - - - - - Goe. 280 

— Miss, Letter to ----- - Burns 358 

Alexander's feast — an ode ----- Dry. 527 

Alexandra, Welcome to - - • - - - Ten. 388 

Alexandre, Mons. , Lines to - - - Scott 447 

Alexas, attendant, c. in Ant. and Cleop. - Sha. 911 

Alexis, a pastoral Vir. 17 

— and Dora — an elegy - - - - - Goe. 283 

— calls me cruel - - - - - - - Bry. 151 

— grand-duke, At banquet to - - - • Hoi. 256 
Welcome to ------ Hoi. 255 

— or summer Pope 31 

Alfred the Great — a sonnet - W^or. 359 

— To - - - Tho. 470 

— Vargrave was one of those men - - - Mer. 18 
Algiers, Epistle from ----- Cam. 317 
Alhadra, wife of Isidore, c. in Eemorse - - Col. 310 
Ali and the angels P. of F. 44 

— and the Jew - - - - - - P. of F. 96 

— Ben Ali (did you never read - - - Hood 498 

Aliatar, Death of Bry. 146 

Alice, c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 

— Brand — a ballad Scott 136 

— Fell, or Poverty Wor. 81 

— princess, Dedicatory to - - - - Ten. 661, 707 

— queen's lady, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 
Alienated mistress, The ----- Col. 218 
Alike I hate to be your debtor - - - Low. 371 
Alison, Rev. Archibald, Letter to - Burns 464 
Alive ridiculous, and dead forgot - - - Pope 238 
All after pleasures as I rid one day - - - Her. 167 

— along the valley, stream that flashest - Ten. 386 

— are architects of fate ----- Lon. 130 

— are not taken ! there are left - - - Bro. 81 

— are but parts of one stupendous whole - Pope 1 93 

— are indebted much to thee - - - Cow. 623 

— are sleeping, weary heart ! - - - - Lon. 58 

— beauteous flower ! whose center glows - Flo. 199 

— both in prose and verse - - Sch. 269 

— by the moonlight river-side - - - Wor. 216 

— compelling, The - - - - - P. of F. 33 

— comprehending, The - - - - P. of F. 100 

— crowd, who foremost shall be damned - Pope 156 

— day has the battle raged - - - . - Lon. 262 

— day long, with a vacant stare - - - Fav. 151 

— day the darkness and the cold - - - Whi. 141 

— day low-hung clouds have, dropped - - Flo. 532 



9 1 Alenijcm 

Ail devil as I am, a damned wretch - - Burns 33 

— flesh is grass, and all its glory fades - - Cow. 290 

— for love " — an epilogue -■-'"-- Dry. 516 

— glorious, The - - - - - - P. of F. 106 

— good things have not kept aloof - - Ten. 476 

— governing, The - - - - - P. of F. 144 

— grim and soiled and brown with tan - Whi. 98 

— hail ! inexorable lord ! - Burns 83 

— hail, once pleasing, once inspiring - - Pope 381 

— hail to thee, thou bawmy bud - - Burns 338 

— hearing. The P. of F. 68 

— here, 1867, — class re-union - - - -Hoi. 222 

— his faults observed ----- Sha. 781 

— his successors gone before him - - - Sha. 42 

— honor to women,— they soften and leaven Sch. 219 

— hope abandon ye who enter here - Dante 8 

— houses wherein men have lived and died Lon. 214 

— human things are subject to decay - - Dry. 175 

— impediments in fancy's course - - Sha, 277 

— in a moment through the gloom - Mil. 29 ; Fav. 193 

— in the family way ----- Moore 622 

— is vanity, saith the preacher - Byron 193 ; Fav. 206 

— joy was bereft me the day - - - Scott 378 

— kin' o' smily round the lips - Low. 230 

— known, The ----- P. of F. 55 

— lonely on the sultry beach - - - Burns 316 

— love is sweet, given or returned - - She. 239 

— lovers young, all lovers must - - - Sha. 966 

— men's offices to speak patience to those - Sha. 129 

— my weary days I passed -_'■__ Goe. 115 

— nature is but art, unknown to thee - - Pope 194 

— nature seems at work - - - Col. 213 ; Flo. 514 

— night above their rocky bed - - - Whi. 212 

— night the booming minute-gun Hem. 356 ; Fav. 247 

— night the chiefs before their vassals lay - Iliad 222 

— night the dreadless angel unpursued - - Mil. 134 

— our knowledge is ourselves to know - Pope 220 

— overgrown with bush and fern - - - Hoi. 151 

— perceiving. The - - - - P. of F. 131 

— places that the eye of heaven - - - Sha. 361 

— powerful, The ----- P. of F. 139 

— praise the likeness by thy skill - - Wor. 248 

— praised the legend more or less - - Lon. 287 

— praise-worthy, The - - - - P. of F. 119 

— precious things, discovered late - - Ten. 102 

— ready? cried the captain - - - Whi. 43 

— rough winds are hushed and silent - - Ing. 474 

— saints ------- Low. 363 

— seeing, The ------ P. of F. 71 

— seems infected that the infected spy - - Pope 55 



AU 
Ambitio 



22 



All sufficing, The ----- P. of F. 168 

— tenantless, save to the crannying wind Byron 307 

— that glisters is not gold - - - - Sha. 190 

— that is great in thought, that strikes - - Eog. 343 

— that lives must die ----- Sha. 813 

— that poets feign of ----- gha. 529 

— that's bright must fade - Moore 522 

— that tread the globe are but an handful - Bry . 22 

— the clouds about the sun lay up in golden Ing. 270 

— the fluttering wishes ----- p r o. 165 

— the old gods are dead - . - Lon. 254 

— the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten - Sha. 806 

— the world's a stage ----- gha. 214 

— things are thine ; no gifts have we - • - Whi. 394 

— things give token of thee - - - Goe. 45 

— things journey ; sun and moon - - - Eliot 280 

— things die and decay - - - - P. of F. 163 

— things that are, are with more spirit - - Sha. 188 

— things that are on earth shall wholly - Bry. 149 

— things will die --..-_ Ten. 467 

— thou gentle one, lies embraced - - Sch. 259 

— thoughts, all creeds, all dreams are true - Ten. 475 

— thoughts, all passions, all delights - - Col. 147 

— were attentive to the god-like man - - Vir. 147 

— worldly shapes shall melt in gloom - - Cam. 164 

— worshiped gold, thou mighty mystery - Cow. 35 

— ye, who in small bark have following - Dante 245 

— yesterday I was spinning -.-'-- Pro. 85 
Allah !------- P. of F. 13 

— --.---..- Lon. 392 

— Bi-smi-llah, say that God is one - P. of F. 13 

— gives light in darkness ----- Lon. 392 

— there is none other God but he - - P. of F. 32 
Allah's prophets - - - - P. of F. 63 
Allan by his grief excited - Burns 317 

— Water, Eemarks on - Burns 306 
Allegory — a portal as of shadowy adamant She. 469 
Allegra ------ Low. 10 

Allen, Elizabeth A. Bringing our sheaves Fav. 424 

— a-dale has no fagot for burning - - - Scott 202 
All's well - Whi. 151 

— well that ends well ----- Sha. 254 
Almighty God ! - Moore 345 

— God of truth and love ----- Wes. 363 

— judge, how shall poor wretches - - Her. 292 

— king, whose wondrous hand - - - Cow. 94 

— Lord, who from thy glorious throne - Her. 295 

— The P. of F. 113 

— to persuade thou art ----- Wes. 237 
Alms-house and trustees, The - - - Cra. 402 



23 



All 
Ambitio 



Aloe, The - - - - - - - - - Mer. 238 

Alone -------- Hoi. 194 

— - - - - - Poe 170 

— across a foreign plain - - - Hood 364 

— alone ! How drear it is - Wil. 294 

— by the Schuylkill, a wanderer roved - Moore 170 

— no climber of an Alpine cliff - - - Hoi. 194 

— to the banks of the dark-rolling Danube - Cam. 210 

— walking, In thought plaining - - - Cha. 603 
Along a river-side, I know not where - - Low. 378 

— Crane river's sunny slope - Whi. 401 

— the aisle where prayer was made - - Whi. 354 

— the cool sequestered vale of life - - - Fav. 33 

— the grass sweet airs are blown - - - Eos. 105 

— the roadside like the flowers of gold - - Whi. 325 

— the starlit Seine went music swelling - Hem. 186 

— thy wild and willowed shore - - - Scott 22 
Alonzo, king of Naples, c. in Tempest - - Sha. 1 
Alphonzo, c. in Siege of Valencia - - - Hem. 434 
Alpine hunter, The ----- s cn> 115 
Alps, Evening among the Hem. 334 

— The - - Rog. 2Q 

— at daybreak - Rog. 252 

Already close by our summer dwelling - Bry. 232 

— evening. In the duskiest nook - - - Mer. 461 
Altar, The ------- Her. 106 

Altera Torquatum cepit Leonara poetam - Mil. 533 

Although I be the basest of mankind - - Ten. 78 

— my back be at the wa' - Burns 273 

— my bed were in yon muir - - - Burns 193 

— the cross could not Christ here detain - Her. 590 

— the last, not least ----- gha. 848 
Altmayer, c. in Faust ----- p a u. 22 
Alva, Duke of, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

— Oscar of — a tale ----- Byron 145 
Alvar, Don, c. in Remorse - - - Col. 310 

— Gonzalez, c. in Siege of Valencia - - Hem. 434 
Always I loved and always love thee - - Arn. 68 
Am I a king, that I should call - - - Lon. 395 

— I dreaming? Is mine eye - . - - - Sch. 47 

— I in Italy? Is this the Mincius - Rog. 34 
Amador, Don, c. in Spanish Gypsy - - Eliot 267 

Amain Lon. 361 

Amalia - Sch. 20 

Amanda, To - Tho. 465 

Amang the trees where humming-bees - Burns 272 

Amaranth, The. (Shelley.) - Flo. 182 

— Poesy of the - - - - - - Flo. 181 

Amatory colloquy between bank and govt. Moore 615 

Ambitio cathari quinque constat actibus - Her. 574 



Ambition i)A 

And ** 

Ambition - - - - - - - - Hoi. 188 

— following down this far famed slope - Wor. 302 

— should be made of sterner stuff - • - Sha. 777 
Amboyna, " Prologue to - Dry. 482 
Ambracian gulf, Written in passing the - Byron 234 
Ambrose -------- Low. 78 

Amen " stuck in my throat - Sha. 794 

America, Christianity in Wor. 374 

— to Russia — a welcome - - - - Hoi. 255 
American Episcopacy — a sonnet - - - Wor. 375 

— forest girl - - - - - - Hem. 190 

— medical association, For meeting of - - Hoi. 132 

— tradition— a sonnet Wor. 330 

— war, The — a fragment - Burns 203 
Amid a fertile region green with wood - Wor. 388 

— the desolation of a city - - - - She. 433 

— the smoke of cities did you pass - - Wor. 136 

— these aisles, where once his precepts - - Scott 380 

— this dance of object sadness steals - -. Wor. 294 
Amidst a rosy bank of flowers - Burns 322 

— the clamor of exulting joys - Gk>l. 138 

— these glorious works of thine - Whi. 323 
Amiens, a lord, c. in As You Like It - - Sha. 205 
Among a grave fraternity of monks - - Wor. 437 

— all serpents there is one - Sch. 195 

— beautiful pictures. (Alice Cary.) - - Fav. 383 

— our hills and valleys - - - - - Bry. 191 

— the awful form? that stand - Rog. 80 

— the changing months, May stands - - Tho. 396 

— the dwellers in the silent fields - - - Wor. 460 

— the dwellings framed by birds - - - Wor. 155 

— the guests who often stayed - - - She. 310 

— the heathy hills and ragged woods - - Burns 109 

— the hills -------- Whi. 325 

— the holy mountains high - - - - Mil. 502 

— the joys, 'tis one at eve to sail - - - Fav. 266 

— the many lives that I have'known - - Lon. 381 

— the mountains were wc nursed - Wor. 398 

— the spirits of pure flame - Moore 563 

— the trees - - - - - Bry. 321 

— their graven shapes to whom - - - Whi. 110 
Amongst these roses in a row - Flo. 78 
Amor is ever a rogue, and all who - - Goe. 281 

— not the child, the youthful lover - - - Goe. 272 
Amoretti, or sonnets ----- gp e . 687 

Amphion Ten. 105 

Amusements ------- Qra. 370 

Amy Wentworth ------ Whi. 273 

Amyntas, Death of — an elegy - - - Dry. 312 

Amy's cruelty ------- Bro. 602 



9 ^ Ambition 

* Jt - And 

An age hath been when earth was proud - Wor. 425 

— aged satyr sought - - - - • . Sch. 328 

— ample hide divine Ulysses spread - - Odys. 280 

— ancient enemy have I - Pro. 153 

— ancient minstrel sagely said - Scott 71 

— angel with a radiant face - Lon. 339 

— anthem for the queenliest dead - - Poe 58 

— ardent spirit dwells with Christian Cra. 425 ; Fav. 59 

— atheist's laugh a poor exchange - - Burns 165 

— early rose, borne from her genial bower - Flo. 306 

— easy task it is to tread - : - - Fav. 286 

— empty sky, a world of heather - - - Ing. 10 

— exquisite invention this - Flo. 9 

— honest man here lies at rest - - Burns 185 

— honest man was farmer Jones - - - Cra. 207 

— honest man's the noblest work of God - Pope 217 

— honest tale speeds best, being plainly told Sha. 584 

— hour before the worshiped sun - - - Sha. 713 

— hour by his dial : Sha. 213 

— hour with thee ! when earliest day - - Scott 454 

— ill-favored thing, sir - - - - - Sha. 227 

— Indian girl was sitting where - - - Bry. 44 

— infant crying in the night - Ten. 193 

— old, mad, blind, despised, and dying - - She. 415 

— old man broken with the storms - - Sha. 614 

— old man in a lodge within - - - Lon. 365 

— old man on his death-bed lay - - - Hem. 403 

— onion will do well - Sha. 230 

— original something, fair maid - - - Cam. 320 

— Orpheus, an Orpheus Wor. 172 

— oyster cast upon the shore - Cow. 436 

— unreflected light did never yet - - - Tay. 59 
Anacreon, From - Byron 133 

— Odes of Moore 22 

— Paraphrase on - - - - * - Bro. 180 

— translated — an ode Flo. 104 

Anacreon's grave — an antique - - - Goe. 268 

Anacreontic to a plumassier - - - Moore 325 

Anacreontics Moore 76, 161, 176, 327 

— Ten. 482 

Anagram — Mary — Army -.-■-...- Her. 163 

Anarchy, Masque of She. 317 

Ance mair I hail thee, thou gloomy December Burns 232 

Ancient and fish-like smell --■-.- Sha. 10 

— chess king — a sonnet ----- Ing. 459 

— dame, how wide and vast - Cow. 604 

— Greek song of exile ----- Hem. 142 

— Mariner, Rime of the Col. 101 

Ancram Moor, Battle of - - - - - Scott 655 

And all Arabia breathes from yonder box - Pope 67 



And 



26 



And all its aching joys are now no more 

— all my fortunes at thy foot I'll lay 

— all our thoughts ran into tears - 

— are our joys so quickly fled? 

— are you then a thing of art 

— art thou grieved, sweet and sacred 

— as a power is salutary *- 

— as adversaries do in law 

— as she looked round, she saw - 

— at each step, his bloody falchion makes 

— Azrael kissed his eyes' 

— bear about the mockery of woe - 

— better had thee ne'er been born 

— breathe the sweet air of futurity - 

— can it be that I should gain 

— can it be you ve found a place 

— can this be my own world? 

— canst thou, mother, for a moment 

— certain stars shot madly - - - 

— darest thou, then, to beard the lion 

— deal damnation round the land 

— death a shadow from the rock 

— did my Lord on earth endure - 

— did ye not hear of a mirth 

— didst thou know indeed - 

— do I then wonder that Julia 

— dost thou still, thou mass of breathing 

— drinking largely sobers us again - 

— dwells there in a female heart - 

— ever as he went he swept a lyre - 

— follow thee, my lord, throughout the world 

— from the lips of truth one mighty breath 

— gentle dullness ever loves a joke - 

— give to dust that is a little gilt - 

— has the earth lost its so spacious - 

— have I lived to see thee sword in hand - 

— have I lost thee evermore ? - 

— have I measured half my days - 

— he but naked though locked up - 

— heave the sigh of memory * 

— hence one master passion - 

— her ' yes ' once said to you 

— his soul saw her by the light - 

— homeless near a thousand homes 

— hope is brightest when it dawns - 

— how they err, who, in a world- 

— I am lonely — Spanish Gypsy 

— I have felt a presence that disturbs - 

— I have loved you longer than you know 

— I shall not blush in knowing - 



Wor. 


188 


- Sha. 


721 


Fav. 


445 


- Wes. 


344 


Moore 


78 


- Her. 


231 


Wor. 


700 


- Sha. 


236 


Lon. 


120 


Moore 


396 


P. of F. 


128 


- Pope 


91 


Scott 


425 


- Wor. 


697 


Wes. 


5 


- Hoi. 


304 


Ing. 


507 


White 


378 


Sha. 


165 


- Scott 


99 


Pope 


221 


-Wor. 


469 


Wes. 


21 


- Scott 


390 


Ros. 


162 


Moore 


72 


Rog. 


245 


- Pope 


46 


Cow. 


46 


- She. 


577 


d Sha. 


721 


Moore 


364 


- Pope 


136 


Sha. 


639 


- Hood 


170 


Cam. 


235 


- Goe. 


46 


Wes. 


308 


- Sha. 


513 


Flo. 


464 


- Pope 


198 


Bro. 


287 


Moore 


456 


Wor. 


38 


- Scott 


134 


Wil. 


321 


- Eliot 


244 


Wor. 


189 


- Ten. 


347 


Bro. 


591 



27 



And 



And I will stand the hazard of the die 

— if the critic be himself but good 

— is it among rude untutored dales - 

— is it thus ye welcome peace - 

— is the minstrel's voyage o'er - 

— is there care in heaven - - Spe. 155 

— is there glory from the heavens departed 

— is there sadness in dreams, my boy? - 

— is there, then, no earthly place 

— is this Yarrow? 

— it bit and it rankled _____ 

— joy returns to brighten fortitude 

— joy was duty and love was law - 

— king Olaf heard the cry - 

— last thou marked the pensive shade 

— let my body languish - 

— let these wretched bodies die - 

— let this feeble body fail - 

— like a dying lady, lean and pale - 

— like a passing thought she fled - 

— look upon the dust of man with awe 

— love, how e'er the maiden strive 

— love is loveliest when embalmed in tears 

— loved you better than you knew 

— major Bowie, that worthy soul - 

— make each day a critique on the last - 

— many a word at random spoken - 

— many strokes though with a little ax - 

— many there were hurt by that strong boy 

— may you better reck the rede - 

— more true joy Marcellus exiled feels 

— must thou go ----- - 

— my soul from out that shadow - 

— ne'er but once, my son, he says - 

— ne'er did Grecian chisel trace - 

— not in vain embodied to the sight 

— now a bubble burst and now a world 

— now behold ! as at the approach of morning 

— now cross-buns and pancakes o'er - - - 

— now, dear reader ! as a brick may be - 

— now farewell to Italy — perhaps - 

— now love sang, but his was such - 

— now Olympus' shining gates unfold 

— now proud Sparta with her wheels 

— now, quoth the minister (eased of his 

— now the verse proceeds to torments new 

— now 'tis time, for their officious haste 

— now to Xanthus' gliding stream they drove 

— now with all thy pencil's truth - 

— of his signs is this P, 



Sha. 


591 


Byron 


255 


Wor. 


278 


Hood 


354 


White 


218 


; Fav. 


326 


Hem. 


359 


Hem. 


226 


Moore 


587 


Wor. 


268 


Mer. 


70 


Wor. 


281 


Whi. 


206 


Lon. 


247 


Moore 


155 


Wes. 


282 


Wes. 


139 


Wes. 


378 


She. 


506 


Burns 


63 


Wor. 


657 


Scott 


296 


Scott 


134 


Fav. 


306 


Burns 


315 


Pope 


56 


Scott 


290 


Sha. 


532 


She. 


469 


Burns 


165 


Pope 


217 


White 


369 


Poe 


58 


Scott 


458 


Scott 


113 


Wor. 


363 


Pope 


189 


Lon. 


17 


Moore 


621 


Wil. 


184 


Rog. 


169 


Ros. 


251 


Iliad 


112 


Odys. 


47 


Moore 


625 


Dante 


67 


Dry. 


22 


Iliad 


419 


Moore 


30 


. of F. 


125 



And 
Andromeda 



28 



And often did beguile her of her tears - - Sha. 883 

— oh, beloved voices upon which - - - Bro. 84 

— oh, for ane-and-twenty, Tarn ! - - Burns 238 

— oh, if there be an elysium on earth - - Moore 477 

— oh, my Eppie ------ Burns 227 

— oh, that eye was in itself a soul - - Byron 17 

— on her lover's arm she leant - - - - Ten. 103 

— our spirits rushed together at the touching Ten. 90 

— Pallas now, to raise the rival's fire - - Odys. 292 

— Peter Bell, when he had been - - - She. 305 

— preferred in his heart the least ringlet Moore 464 

— proud his mistress' orders to perform - Pope 159 

— said I that my limbs were old - - - Scott 17 

— shall mere man of men demand - ' - Wes. 167 

— shall, the pontiff asks, profaneness - - Wor. 361 

— she my love that was, my saint that is - Spe. 671 

— shrink ye from the way - Hem. 418 

— sighs to find them in the wood - Bry. 93 

— silence was in Heaven ----- Mil. 69 

— since I never dare to write - Hoi. 12 

— smooth as monumental alabaster - - Sha. 906 

— so an easier life our Cyclops - - - Bro. 166 

— so from hour to hour we ripe and ripe - Sha. 213 

— so it proved ! the nation proved - - Goe. 409 

— sowed with stars the heaven thick as a field Mil. 167 

— spit upon my Jewish gaberdine - - Sha. 184 

— spotless pleasure builds her sacred bower - Spe. 698 

— suclj. is human life ; so gliding - - - Eog. 184 

— the green paradise which western waves She. 578 

— the heart that is soonest awake to the Moore 217 

— the hooded clouds like friars - - - Lon. 6 

— the imperial votaress passed on - - - Sha. 165 

— the night shall be filled with music - - Lon. 87 

— the owls have awakened the crowing cock Col. 13 

— the vile squealing of the wry-necked - Sha. 188 

— then came one of sweet and earnest looks - She. 578 

— then he drew a dial from his poke - - Sha. 213 

— then her look — oh ! where's the heart so wise Moore 368 

— then it started like a guilty thing - - Sha. 812 

— then the blue-eyed Norseman told - - Lon. 247 

— there never was moonlight so sweet - Moore 385 

— there they sleep ! the men who stood - - Hem. 317 

— there upon the sod below - Flo. 180 

— there was mounting in hot haste - - Byron 304 

— therefore if to love can be desert - - Bro. 155 

— they call this improvement?- - - -Cam. 230 

— thou art dead, as young as fair - - Byron 248 

— thou hast stolen a jewel, death ! - - - Fav. 353 

— thou, oh, life, the lady of all bliss - - Ros. 276 

— thou, O matron of immortal fame ! - - Vir. 267 



29 



And thou, river of to-morrow, flowing - 
- thou, remembered Sagamore 
~ thou wert sad — yet I was not with thee ! - 

— though many's the slip 'twixt the cup 

— thus I clothe my naked villainy 

— thus the heart will break - 

— to our ages drowsy blood - 

— waft a sigh from Indus to the Pole 

— was thy home, pale withered thing - 

— well do vanished frowns enhance 

— well the lonely infant knew 

— what is love? It is a doll dressed up - 

— what is penance with her knotted thong - 

— what is so rare as a day in June? - 

— what is that most brief and bright - . - 

— what melodious sounds — a sonnet 

— what shall be the song to-night 

— what though winter still pinch severe 

— what will ye hear, my daughters 

— when you stick on conversation's burr 

— where have you been, my Mary 

— where is truth? On tombs — a fragment 

— wherefore sends not - - - - - 

— whither would you lead me then? 

— who feels discord now or sorrow? 

— whose immortal hand could shed 

— will you, will you, I will marry 

— Willy, my eldest-born, is gone 

— wilt thou, faithless one, then - 

— wilt thou have me fashion into speech 

— wilt thou weep when I am low? 

— wiped our eyes of drops 

— woman's love, if in a beggar's lamp - 

— ye brave Lord, whose goodly personage 

— yet a spirit still, and bright 

— yet because thou overcomest so - 

— you, brave Cobham ! to the latest breath 

— you must love him ere to you 

— you shall deal the funeral dole - 
Anderson, Dr., Letter to - 
Andrea, servant, c. in The Cenci 
Andre's request to Washington 
Andrew, Gov. — inauguration of statue 

— Kyknians dead and gone 

— Rykman's prayer --.--.- 
Andrewes, Lancelot, Death of (Milton) - 

— Lancelot, Letter to 
Androcles. from his injured lord 
Andromache, c. in Troilus and Cressida 
Andromeda, by Perseus saved and wed - 



And 




Andromeda 


Lon. 


383 


- Fav. 


194 


Byron 


226 


- Mer. 


51 


Sha. 


563 


Byron 


305 


Low. 


106 


- Pope 


110 


Hem. 


324 


Moore 


478 


Flo. 133 : 


520 


- Keats 


275 


Wor. 


366 


- Low. 


107 


She. 


575 


-Wor. 


363 


Hoi. 


211 


- Scott 


405 


Ing. 
- Hoi. 


462 


59 


Flo. 


355 


- She. 


504 


Goe. 


374 


- Scott 


217 


She. 


503 


Moore 


51 


Sha, 


238 


- Ten. 


378 


Sch. 


109 


- Bro. 


155 


Byron 


231 


- Sha. 


214 


Wil. 


211 


- Spe. 
Wor. 


27 
171 


- Bro. 


156 


Pope 


231 


-Wor. 


416 


Scott 


437 


Burns 


459 


She. 


268 


- Wil. 


234 


Hoi. 


298 


- Whi. 


281 


Whi. 


281 


- Cow. 


558 


Her. 


514 


- Cow. 


599 


Sha. 


622 


- Ros. 


105 



Andronicus on 

Antonio oyj 

Andronicus, Marcus, c. in Titus Andronicus Sha. 684 

Anecdote for fathers Wor. 88 

— The bag of gold - - - - - - Eog. 143 

Anecdotes and remarks of songs - - Burns 293 

Anemone. (Hartley Coleridge.) - - - Flo. 499 

— Eed. (Tennyson.) ------ Flo. 130 

— To the. (Miss Pratt.)- - Flo. 129 
Angel and the Child ------ Lon. 339 

— fair, Walhalla's charms displaying - - Sch. 20 

— of charity ------ Moore 346 

— of death ------ P. of F. 126 

— of death - - - Pro. 84 

— of death, extend thy silent reign ! - - Hoi. 123 

— of God, whate'er betide Wes. 344 

— of patience ------- Whi. 96 

— of peace, thou hast wandered - - - Hoi. 290 

— of the Lord. (Cain.) ----- Byron 105 

— of the rain. (Kimball.)- - Fav. 186 

— visits - - - - - - - - Hem. 372 

Angelica, c. in Spanish Student - - - Lon. 44 

Angelo, a deputy, c. in Meas. for Measure - Sha. 67 

— a goldsmith, c. in Comedy of Errors - - Sha. 93 
Angels and ministers of grace - - - - Sha. 816 

— and saints, to all - Her. 163 

— are bright still, though the brightest - - Sha. 804 

— bidding, The - Pro. 331 

— have talked with him Ten. 468 

— in the heavens of gladness reap - - Arn. 147 

— in the house (anon.) ----- Fav. 237 

— of Buena Vista ------ Whi. 119 

— of light, spread your bright wings - - Pro. 399 

— of the scales P. of F. 101 

— story, The Pro. 21 

— wings P. of F. 37 

Angelus unicuique suus (sic credite gentis) - Mil. 532 

Angus, c. in Macbeth Sha. 788 

Anjou, Duke of (Reigmer), c. in Henry vi. - Sha. 469 

Anna Marie, love, up is the sun - - - Scott 422 

— thy charms — a song Burns 261 

— was young and lovely - - Cra. 157 

Annabel Lee Poe 64 

Anne, queen, Death of - Her. 591 

— Lady, c. in Richard iii. - - - - - Sha. 556 
Annie and Rhoda, sisters twain - - - Whi. 375 

— For - - - - Poe 101 

— of Tharaw, my true love - - - - Lon. 92 
Anniversary celebration, For an Whi. 55 

— hymn Whi. 267 

— of one's conversion - Wes. 8 

— song Goe. 80 



q 1 Andronicus 

u x Antonio 

Annot Lyle's songs ------ Scott 419 

Annotations to second part of Faust - - Fau. 407 
Announced by all the trumpets of the sky Flo. 293 ; Fav. 43 

Annoyer, The - - - - - - - Wil. 281 

Annulo conjugali, De Her. 572 

Annunciation, The Pro. 374 

Annus inemorabilis, 1789 Cow. 463 

— mirabilis, 1666 ------ Dry. 47 

Another assassination ! This venerable - - Eog. 109 

— clouded night, the stars are hid - - Hoi. 188 

— day, another day - Scott 238 

— hand is beckoning us Whi. 139 

— lean, unwashed artificer - Sha. 349 

— Leonora once inspired ... - Cow. 571 

— little wave upon the sea of life - - - Fav. 169 

— star 'neath time's horizon dropped - - Low. 106 

— year ! another deadly blow - Wor. 275 
Anselmo, a monk, c. in Vespers of Palermo - Hem. 493 
xAnswer me, burning stars of night - - - Hem. 409 

— me when I call ------ Mil. 485 

— The - - - - Her. 270 ; Ten. 491 ; Whi. 337 

— then thy blest design ----- Wes. 300 

— to a child's question ----- Col. 164 

— to a poetical epistle ----- Burns 67 

— to elegant verses ----- Byron 159 

— to lines by Eousseau ----- Byron 132 

— to stanzas to Lady Hesketh - - - - Cow. 506 
Answers in a game — a song - - - - Goe. 32 
Antenor, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - - Sha. 622 
Anti-Apis - Low. 94 

— Thelyphthora - Cow. 97 

Antichristi decore pontificali, De - - - Her. 565 

Anticipation — a sonnet Wor. 274 

Anticipations of eternity - Wes. 374 

Antigonus, c. in Winter's Tale - - - - Sha. 304 

Antiochus, c. in Judas Maccabseus - - Lon. 324 

— Daughter of, c. in Pericles - Sha. 977 

— king of Antioch, c. in Pericles - - - Sha. 977 
Antipholus, of Ephesus, c. in Comedy of Errors Sha. 93 

— of Syracuse, c. in Comedy of Errors - - Sha. 93 

Antiphon Her. 136, 181 

Antique to the Northern Wanderer - - Sch. 228 

Antiques - Goe. 268 

— at Paris ------- Sch. 229 

Antiquity of freedom Bry. 198 

Antislavery society, For a meeting of - - Whi. 54 

Antitheses Byron 257 

Antonio, a merchant, c. in Mer. of Venice - Sha. 181 

— a sea-captain, c. in Twelfth Night - - Sha. 281 

— brother of Leonato, c. in Much Ado - Sha. Ill 



Antonio o 9 

Armed °" J 

Antonio, father of Proteus, c. in Two G. of Ver. Sha. 21 

— the usurping duke, c. in Tempest - - Sha. 1 
Antony and Cleopatra— a play - Sha. 9il 

— and Cleopatra, Last banquet of - Hem. 104 

— Knyveth, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

— Mark, c. in Julius Csesar - Sha. 764 
Apelles, hearing that his boy - Cow. 607 
Apemantus, c. in Timon of Athens - - Sha. 741 
Apennines, At convent in - - Wor. 319 

— Passage of the She. 410 

— To my mother, from the - Wil. 63 

— To the - - - - - - - - Bry. 159 

Aphrodite preserves her beauty - - - Sen. 258 

Aphorisms, Poetic - Lon. 93 

Apollo, c. in Prometheus Bound - - - She. 219 

— Hymn of ------- She. 425 

— Ode to - - - - - - - - Cow. 429 

— Apollo's lute, strung with his hair - - Sha. 149 
Apologies— sonnets - Wor. 357, 367, 389 
Apology, An ------ Wil. 296 

— The. (Winstanley.) ----- l n g. 402 

Apostacy of his son Wes. 52 

Apothecary, An, c. in Eomeo and Juliet - - Sha. 712 

Apparent death ------ G- oe . 43 

Appeal, An -------- Pro. 376 

— The," Epilogue to Scott 415 

— for the " Old South Church " - - -Hoi. 311 
Appearances .-_--. Mer. 453 
Appendix — letter to publisher - Pope 518 
Applaud thee to the very echo - - - Sha. 807 
Apple-blossom, Poesy of the - Flo. 32 

— blossoms. (Landon.) - - - - Flo. 33 

— of Life, The Mer. 162 

— tree, Planting of the Bry. 222 

Appledore, Pictures from Low. 347 

Applethwaite, At — a sonnet - Wor. 227 

Apprehension, An — a sonnet - - - Bro. 86 

Apprenticed - lng. 258 

Approach with reverence. There are those - Kog. 249 

April Whi. 167 

— (Longfellow) Flo. 533 

— a song Goe 69 

— day, An Lon. 6 

— mornings, Two - Wor. 417 

— (Shepherd's Calendar) Spe. 530 

— Sonnet to White 346 

Apuleius, Paraphrases on Bro. 169 

Aquapendent, Musings near - Wor. 308 

Arabella Cra. 88 

— Stuart --..... Hem. 149 



33 



Antonia 
Armed 



Arabia, After death in Arn. 165 

Arabian anecdote, Song on an - - - Hem. 261 

— Nights, Eecollections of - Ten. 11 
Arabic, Imitation from the - - - - She. 437 
Aragon, prince of, c. in Merchant of Venice • Sha. 181 
Arbuthnot, Dr., Epistle to ... p pe 263 

Arcades Mil. 429 

Arcadian hymn to Flora - - - . • - Flo. 398 

Archangel's song. (Faust.) - Goe. 391 

Archibald, earl of Douglas, c. in Henry iv. - Sha. 382 

Archidamus, c. in Winter's Tale - Sha. 304 

Archiep. Cantuar., Letter to - - . - Her. 510 

Archimedes and the student - Sch. 247 

Architecture, Eural Wor. 85 

Archy, c. in Charles the First - She. 484 

Arctic lover, The Bry. 135 

Ardor and memory ------ Ros. 258 

Are God and nature then at strife - - Ten. 193 

— not within the leaf of pity - - Sha. 756 

— we not nobles? we who trace - - - Pro. 398 

— we then wholly fallen? Low. 98 

— words the proof of sins forgiven? - - Wes. 294 

— ye forever to your skies departed? - Hem. 372 

— you good men and true? - Sha. 123 
Arethusa arose ------- She. 424 

Aretimias, Epitaph on, by Heraclides - - Cow. 515 

Arey, H. E. G. Myself Flo. 361 

Argus - Pope 360 

Argyle, Dream of (E. H. W.) - - - - Whi. 394 

Argyleshire, On visiting - Cam. 1 60 

Arias, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 265 

Ariel, c. in Faust - Fau. 170 

— an airy spirit, c. in Tempest - - - Sha. 1 

— to Miranda ------- Sha. 446 

Arimanes, c. in Manfred - Byron 87 

Arion Eliot 137 

— when through tempests' cruel wrack - - Spe. 693 
Ariosto, Translation from - Scott 415 
Arise and speak thy sorrows - - - - Flo. 49 

— arise, arise ! - She. 416 

— this day shall shine Pro. 104 

— ye sons of worth, arise - Gol. 152 
Aristippus, Philosopher - Moore 164 

Aristocracy Mer. 442 

Aristotle, Platonic ideas of - Cow. 578 

Arlon, Sir Walter d', c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 

Arm-chair, From my Lon. 395 

Armada, The - - Mac. 141 

Armed at point exactly cap-a-pe - - - Sha. 814 

— with hyacinthme rod Moore 38 

3 



Armenian 
Arnold 



34 



Armenian lady's love, The - 




"v * r or. 


130 


Armgart — a play 




Eliot 


36 


Armour, James, Letter to - 


Burns 


514 


Arms, and the man I sing, who - 


Vir. 


123 


Armstrong, Agnes, Song 


to 


Burns 


295 


Army hymn 




Hoi. 


155 


— of clouds, ye winged host in troops 


Wor. 


208 


— of the Lord, The 


. 


Pro. 


357 


Arnault, A. V. , Translation from 


Mae. 


162 


ARNOLD, EDWIN, Poems of: 






Aba-ser, The . . . P. of F. 


62 


Earthquake, Sura of the P. of F. 


120 


Abraham's Bread . . " 


115 


Emigration, Sura of the " 


162 


— Offense . . . . " 


40 


End of Krishna's Tria 


I. s. s. 


59 


Accountant, The . . " 


120 


Equitable, The . ' . 


P. of F. 


164 


Adam quitting Eden . . " 


154 


— The— 1 ' God will roll 


up" Jj 


75 


Adulteress, The . . " 


151 


Eternal, The . 




134 


After Death in Arabia L. A. 


165 


— in the Future 


" 


184 


Afternoon, Sura of the P. of F. 


170 


— in the Past 


" 


184 


Al-Akhaf, Sura of 


80 


Ever-Indulgent, The 


" 


160 


— Thlas . 


134 


— Living, The 


. " 


129 


— Kauthar, Sura of . . " 


82 


Evil Deeds. 


" 


57 


Ali and the Angels . . " 


44 


Exalted, The 


tc 


84 


— and the Jew . . . " 


96 


Exalter, The . 


" 


63 


All-Compelling, The . " 


33 


Faithful, The 


, " 


27 


— Comprehending, The . " 


100 


Fashioner, The 


It 


38 


— Glorious, The . . " 


106 


Firm, The . 


. " 


114 


— Governing, The . . " 


144 


First, The . 


" 


142 


— Hearing, The . . " 


68 


Fly and the False gods, The ' ' 


113 


— Knower, The . . . " 


55 


Forenoon, Sura of the 


, " 


170 


— Preserving, The . " 


131 


Forewarner, The 


u 


140 


— Powerful, The . . " 


139 


Forgiver, The 


" 


40 


— Praiseworthy, The . " 


119 


Four Travelers, The 


" 


182 


— Seeing, The . . . " 


71 


FulfiUer, The 


" 


140 


— Sufficing, The . . " 


168 


Garden and the Rock, 


The " 


119 


Allah! " 


13 


Gatherer, The . 


" 


167 


Allah's Prophets . . " 


63 


Gautama. See Buddha. 




Almighty, The . . . " 
Angel of Death, The . '« 


113 


God's name in Heaven 


" 


22 


126 


— Will and Free-will 


" 


66 


Angels of the Scales . . " 


101 


Good, The . 


, " 


151 


— Wings " 


37 


— Deeds . 


" 


57 


Arabia. After Death in L. A. 


165 


Gracious One, The 


" 


76 


Arnold. Edwin, Notice of " 


177 


Guardian, The . 


« 


112 


Artificer. The . P. of F. 


37 


Guide, The . 


t< 


182 


Avenger. The ..." 


156 


Harmful, The . 


" 


175 


Azar and Abraham . . " 


34 


Hassan's Slaves . 


" 


80 


Azrael and the Indian Prince " 


71 


He and She . 


. 'l.a. 


168 


Bee, Sura of the . . " 


84 


— who is aware . 


. P. of F 


. 77 


Beginner, The . . . " 


121 


Hearer of Prayer 




96 


Beneficent, The . . " 


91 


Hell and Heaven 


" 


156 


Bestower, The . . . " 


44 


Help in Peril . 


" 


30 


Books of Good and Evil " 


94 


Hidden, The 


(C 


142 


Bountiful, The, . . " 


93 


Holy One, The . 


c< 


22 


Buddha, Remarks about L. A. 


179 


Honorer, The 


" 


65 


Cattle, Sura of the . P. of F. 


42 


Hymn to Vishnu . 


i. s. s. 


11 


Cleaving Asunder, Sura of " 


93 


rolis and Abraham . 


P. of F 


. 107 


Clement, The . 


78 


Imran's Family, Sura of 


65 


Closer, The . . . . " 


57 


Inevitable, Sura of the 


" 


88 


Compassionate, The . " 


17 


Inheritor, The . 


" 


186 


Counsel, Sura of . " 


76 


Islam—" The Patient ' 


" 


190 


Cow, Sura of the . P. of F. 106, 


112 


Islam's Rosary — " Pearls 




Creator, The. . . P. of F. 


35 


of the Faith " . 


" 


1 


Daybreak. Sura of . . " 


131 


Jonas, Sura of 


(( 


75 


Death, Angel of . . . " 


126 


Judge of All, The 
— of Judges, The . 


u 


73 


Dharra and the Date-stone " 


79 


" 


101 


Dominant. The . . . " 


42 


K, Sura of . 


K 


140 


Dove, The . 


173 


King of Kings, The 


(1 


19 



35 



Armenian 
Arnold 



King of the Kingdom . P. of F. 162 

— Sheddah's Paradise . " 175 

Kismat " 138 

Krishna and Radnah united I.S.S. 65 

— cheered ..." 33 

— in Paradise . . . " 62 

— Longings of . . . " 38 

— made bolder . . . " 44 

— Penitence of " 24 

— Rebuking of ..." 57 

— Sports of .... " 15 

— supposed False . . " 47 

— Trial of, ended " 59 

— troubled ....." 29 
Last, The . . . .P. of F. 142 

— Day, The . . . . " 73 

— Sermon of the Prophets " 167 
Leader Astray, The . . " 66 
Life Beyond, The . . " 129 
Light, The . . . . " 181 

— of Asia, The . . L. A. 1 

— of Life, The . . P. of F. 121 

— Sura of .... 181 
Longings of Krishna . I. S. S. 38 
Lord of Splendid Power P. of F. It3 
Loving, The . . . . " 103 
Maintainer, The " 88 
Majestic, The ..." 34 
Making of Man . 38 
Manifest, The . . . " 142 
Merciful, The ..." 15 

— Sura of the . " 163 
Message from the Dead . " 125 
Mighty, The . . . " 32 
Moakkibat, The . " 55 
Mohammedanism — Pearls 

of the Faith . . " 1 

Moon, Sura of the . . " 139 
Moses and the Angel . " 149 
Mothers of the Names . " 142 
Muhammad in the Cemetery ' ' 77 

Muhammad's Journey to 

Heaven ..." 50 

Names of Allah " 1 

Nearest Friend, The . . " 115 
Night-star, Sura of the . " 87 

Nimrud and the Gnat . " 62 

Notes to Light of Asia . L. A. 185 

— to Pearls of the Faith P. of F. 191 
Om !— Reverence to Ganesha I.S.S. 10 
One above Reproach, The P. ofF. 149 

— The . . ' . . " 133 
Opener, The ..." 50 
Ozair the Jew ..." 134 
Pardoner, The . . . " 80 
Patient, The— " Islam " " 190 
Peace of Paradise " 24 

— The " 24 

Pearls of the Faith (Islamism)P.of F. 1 
Penitents of Krishna . I. S. S. 24 
Poets and Prophets . P. ot F. 110 
Preserver, The . . . " 87 

Pronunciation, Rules for L. A. 171 
Prophet's Oath, The . P. of F. 190 
Propitious, The . . " 173 
Providence . . . . " 138 
Provider, The . . . " 49 

— The, "When God fash- 

ioned Paradise " . ' 171 

Quickener, The . . . " 125 
Radna and Krishna united I. CI. ?. o5 



S. S. 
ofF. 



S. S. 
ofF. 



S. S. 
ofF. 



Raiser from Death, The P. of F. 
Rebuking of Krishna 
Reckoner, The . 
Relenting, The 
Restorer, The 
Reverence to Ganesha 
Rewarder, The . 
Rose and the Dewdrop 

— Garden, The 
Self -subsisting, The . 
Seven Heavens, The 
Shepherd's Prayer, A 
Signs of the Lord : 

— Sura of the 
Sin of Sins, The 
Sinful Angels, The . 
Slayer, The . 
Solomon and the Ant 
Solomon's Signet . 
Spider and the Dove, The 
Sports of Krishna . 
Star, Sura of the . . 
Strong, The . 
Sufficer, The 
Sultan and the Potter 
Sura Fifty-nine . 

— " Of Al-Akhaf " 

— " Of Al-Kauthar " . 

— "Of Cleaving Asunder 

— " Of Counsel " 

— " Of Daybreak " 

— " Of Imran's Family ' 

— " Of Jonas " 

— " Of K " . 

— "Of Light" 

— " Of the Afternoon " 

— " Of the Bee " . 

— " Of the Cattle " . 

— "Of the Cow" . 

— " Of the Earthquake 

— " Of the Emigration ' 

— " Of the Forenoon " 

— " Of the Inevitable " 

— " Of the Merciful " 

— "Of the Moon" . 

— " Of the Night Star " 

— " Of the Signs " . 

— " Of the Star " 

— "Of Troops" 

— "Of Women" . . " 90, 

— "OfYaSin" . 
Tasmin and Salsabil 
Tent-pole, The . 
Thankful, The . 
Throne-verse, The . 
Troops, Sura of the 
Trumpet, The . 
Truth, The . 
Turning to Mecca . 
Two Gateways, The 
Uncloser, The . 
Unerring, The . 
Union of Radna and Krishna I.S.S. 65 
Verity of Sayid . . P. of F. 27 
Very Great, The 

Vishnu, Hymn to . I. S. S. 
Watchful, The . . . P. of F. 
Withholder, The . 
Witness, The . . . " 
Women, Sura of . . . " 90, 
Ya Sin, Sura of . . " 



107 
57 
CO 

154 

122 
10 

156 

186 
91 

130 
85 
68 
35 

125 

111 
15 

126 
17 

144 
30 
15 

160 
79 

170 
19 
33 
80 
82 



76 
131 

65 

75 
140 
181 
170 

84 

42 
106, 112 
120 
162 
170 

88 
163 
139 

87 
125 
160 
168 
167 
184 
103 
114 

82 

33 
168 
130 
111 
100 
171 

59 
188 



Arnold 



36 



Arnold, Edwin, notice of - Arn. 177 

Around a wild and woody hill - Wor. 295 

— Sebago's lonely lake Whi. 31 

— the tomb, oh, bard divine ! Moore 60 

— the vase of life at your slow pace - - Ros. 273 
Arqua, Italy - - - - - - - Rog. 67 

Arran ! a single-crested Teneriffe - Wor. 404 

Arrival, The - Ten. 102 

Arrow and the song, The Lon. 90 

Arsenal at Springfield Lon. 78 

Art and tact — an aphorism - . - Lon. 94 

— drops of nectar ------ Goe. 247 

— is long and time is fleeting - - - - Lon. 3 

— Ode on. (Sprague.) ----- Fav. 302 

— Progress of - - Hood 378 

— thou a friend to Eoderick ? - - - Scott 141 

— thou a statist in the van - Wor. 415 

— thou, Hector, hence forever going - - Sch. 19 

— thou indeed forever gone - She. 564 

— thou pale for weariness - - - - She. 506 

— thou some individual of a kind - Cow. 518 

— thou the bird whom man loves best - - Wor. 149 

— thou the same mysterious traveler - - Fav. 135 

— thou there, truepenny - Sha. 818 
Artegal and Elidure ------ Wor. 98 

— Legend of ------ Spe. 358 

Artemidorus of Cnidos, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 

Artemisia — an imitation - Pope 448 

Arthur, Coming of - - - - - - Ten. 397 

— Death of, Ten. 64 

— duke of Bretagne, c. in King John - - Sha. 332 

— Passing of Ten. 433 

Articulis sacris quidam subscribere - - - Her. 564 

Artifice, The ------- Sch. 269 

Artificer, The P. of F. 37 

Artillery Her. 236 

Artist, The Lon. 392; Mer. 421 

Artists, The Sch. 85 

Arve, River, To the Bry. 126 

Arviragus, c. in Cymbeline ... - Sha. 944 

— and Philicia," Prologue to - - - Dry. 502 
As a beam o'er the face of the waters - Moore 218 

— a boy reserved and naughty - - Goe. 226 

— a buttercup renewed when in life - - Goe. 42 

— a decrepit father takes delight - - - Sha. 1032 

— a fisher-boy I fared ----- Goe. 68 

— a fond mother, when the day is o'er - Lon. 380 

— a pale phantom with a lamp - Lon. 409 

— a twig trembles, which a bird - - - Low. 90 

— a violet's gentle eye She. 575 



37 



Arnold 



As Adam did in paradise - Whi. 

— an imperfect actor on the stage - - - Sha. 

— angels sport amid the stars - Fav. 

— at sunset I was straying - - G-oe. 

— birds their infant brood protect - - Cow. 

— broad as it's long — an epigram - - - G-oe. 

— by the shore, at break of day - . - - Moore 

— cauld a wind as ever blew - Burns 

— chaste as unsunned snow - Sha. 

— dancing o'er the enameled plain - • - Moore 

— dear to me as are the ruddy drops - - Sha. 

— Diane hunted on a day - - - - - Spe. 

— down in the sunless retreats - ~ - Moore 

— exhalations, when they burst - - Moore. 

— faith thus sanctified — a sonnet - - - Wor. 

— fast as thou shalt wane — a sonnet - - Sha. 

— father Adam first was fooled - - - Burns 

— flake by flake, the beetling avalanches - Low. 

— flies the inconstant sun - Oss. 

— from an ancestral oak ----- She. 

— full, as perfect, in vile man - - - Pope 

— full of spirit as the month of May - - Sha. 

— gazing on the Pleiades - Wil. 

— good luck would have it Sha. 

— growth of form or momentary glance - Ros. 

— he that loves oft looks on the dear - - Ros. 

— he that seeks a dark and shady grove - Her. 

— Hermes once took to his feathers light - Keats 

— hope with bowed head, silent stood - Flo. 

— I calmly sat and span Goe. 

— I cam down by yon castle wa' - Burns 

— I cam down yon waterside - Burns 

— I cam o'er Cairney Mount - Burns 

— I came in by our gate end - - - Burns 

— I came o'er the distant hills - - - Flo. 

— I came round the harbor buoy - Ing. 

— I gaed down the waterside - - - Burns 

— I lay asleep in Italy She. 

— I lay my heart on your dead heart - - Fav. 

— I look from the isle, o'er its billows of green Hoi. 

— I one evening sat before my cell - - Her. 

— I sate down to breakfast in state - - - Mac. 

— I stood by yon roofless tower - - - Burns 

— I was a wandering — a song - - - Burns 

— I was a wandering ae morning - - Burns 

— I was walking one morning in May - Burns 

— I was walking up the street - - - Burns 

— if a lark should suddenly drop dead - - Low. 

— if an angel dropped down from the clouds Sha. 

— if his soul in that one word he did outpour Poe 



248 

1031 

221 

25 

60 
223 
664 
187 
955 

41 
771 
673 
344 
435 
364 
1029 
186 

92 
235 
415 
193 
401 
274 

58 
256 
162 
126 
247 

24 
117 
337 
319 
301 
244 
465 
461 
229 
311 
402 
162 
236 
184 
259 
246 
269 
295 
262 

36 
401 

54 



As 
Asan 



38 



As if some star had dropped to glitter there Am. 

— if the morn had waked and then - - Moore 

— if the world and they were hand - - Cow. 

— if we were villains by necessity - - Sha. 

— in a theater the eyes of men '.---'•- Sha. 

— in her ancient mistress' lap - Cow. 

— in lone fairy-lands ----- Mer. 

— in the laurel's murmurous leaves - - Mer. 
^- in the Lemnian caves of fire - - Moore 

— in the bud bit with an envious worm - Sha. 
- — indignation mastered grief — a sonnet - Wor. 
r- it fell upon a day - - - Hood 539 ; Sha. 1053 

— Jupiter I made my court in vain - - Dry. 515 

— late each flower that sweetest blows - - Col. 
-— late I lay in slumber's shadowy vale - Col. 
-— late I sought the spangled bow ers - Moore 

— latterly I chanced to pass - - - - Hood 

— leaves are to the tree — a sonnet - - - Wor. 

— Lebanon's small mountain flood - - Moore 

— life's unending column pours - - - Hoi. 

— lonely as the tower that he inhabits - Lon. 

— long as the cloud abode - Wes. 

— lords their laborers' hire delay - - - Scott 

— Mailie and her lambs thegither - - Burns 

— men forbear the stars should sleep - - Her. 

— merry as the day is long -..--- Sha. 

— Mister B. and Mistress B. - - - - Hood 

— much as twixt the third hour's close - Dante 

— needy gallants in the scrivener's hands Dry. 44, 

— o'er her loom the Lesbian maid - - Moore 

— o'er his furrowed fields which lie - - Whi. 

— o'er the glacier's frozen sheet - Hoi. 

— often as I murmur here - Wor. 

— on a hill-top rude — a sonnet - Cow. 

— on a window late I cast mine eye - - Her. 

— on the banks o' wandering Nith - - Burns 

— on the sea-beat shore Britannia sat - Tho. 

— one who in his journey bates at noon - Mil. 

— one who journeying checks the rein - Ing. 

— one who long hath fled with panting - - Lon. 

— one who long in populous city pent - Mil. 

— one who long in thickets and in brakes - Cow. 

— one who stands on yonder snowy horn - Arn. 

— one who walking in the twilight gloom - Lon. 

— one without a friend, one summer eve - Fav. 

— proper men as ever trod - Sha. 

— puffing quacks some caitiff wretch - - Gol. 

— pure in thought as angels are - - - Eog. 

— recruits in these times are not easily - Moore 

— seamen, shipwrecked on some happy shore Dry. 



65 
473 
135 
851 
377 
602 
452 
172 

37 
713 
319 



32 
93 
24 
434 
441 
435 
162 
344 
353 
447 
35 
224 
115 
601 
171 
482 
661 
151 
47 
154 
596 
208 
146 
418 
275 
21 
414 
203 
284 
160 
121 
257 
764 
267 
221 
337 
271 



39 



As 

As an 



As slow our ship Moore 255 

— soft as dove's down and as white - - Sha, 322 

— some fair violet, loveliest of the glade - Fav.' 238 

— some fond virgin, whom her mother care - Pope 340 

— some true chief of men, bowed down - Eos. 272 

— star that shines dependent upon - - - Wor. 375 

— strangers, you and I are here - - - Pro. 172 

— Tarn the Chapman on a day - - Burns 185 

— Tammy glowered, amazed and curious - Burns 132 

— the birds come in the spring - - - Lon. 401 

— the broad ocean endlessly upheaveth - Low. 22 

— the child knows not of his mother's face - Eos. 266 

— the chilled robin, bound to Florida - - Wil. 191 

— the cold aspect of a sunless way - - - Wor. 239 

— the column of light in the waves - - Sch. 248 

— the gay tint that decks the vernal - Moore 293 

— the husband is, the wife is Ten. 90 

— the old hermit of Prague said - - - Sha. 298 

— the sunrise to the night — a fragment - She. 506 

— the voice of the watch to the mariner's dream Hoi. 130 

— the worn war-horse at the trumpet's sound Scott 413 
- — then no wind at all there blew - - - Spe. 638 

— there is music uninformed by art - - Dry. 26V 

— they who, tossing midst the storm at night Whi. 12* 

— they who watch by sick-beds find relief Whi. 273 

— through the hedge-row shade - - - Eog. 241 
— through the land at eve we went - - Ten. 128 

— through the forest, disarrayed - - - Hoi. 243 

— thus oppressed with many a heavy care White 346 

— thy friend's face with shadow of soul - - Eos. 274 

— treasures that men seek - Lon. 412 

— twilight fades upon the west - - - Fav. 170 

— two whose love, first foolish - - * - Eos. 259 

— unto the bow the cord is - Fav. 45 

— vanquished Erin ... Moore 272 

— when a child on some long - Col. 91 

— when a giant dies ------ Sha. 78 

— when a storm hath ceased - Wor. 3^ 

— when a tree's cut down ----- Dry. 480 

— when desire, long darkling - - - Eos. 227 

— when far off the warbled strains - - - Col. 96 

— when some great and gracious monarch - Dry. 303 

— when that hero, who in each - Pope 371 

— when two men have loved a woman - Eos. 271 

— when with downcast eyes - Ten. 481 

— with the stream our voyage we pursue - Wor. 362 

— yet a child, nor yet a fool to fame - - Pope 268 

— yet a stranger to the gentle fires - - Cow. 568 

— you like it — a play ------ Sha. 205 

Asan Aga, wife of — a ballad . Goe. 147 



Ascension jn 

Atqui ^ u 

Ascension day, For Wes. 66 

Asdrubal, Wife of Hem. 110 

Asem: an Eastern tale ----- Gol. 449 

Asia, e. in Prometheus Bound - She. 219 

Ask me no more, the moon may draw - - Ten. 170 

— me why I send you here - Flo. 59 

— not the cause why sullen Spring - - - Dry. 541 

— nought from the silence, for it cannot speak Arn. 146 

— thy heart whose secret cell - Scott 427 

— what is human lif e— the sage replies - Cow. 166 

— where's the North? at York - Pope 200 

— why God made the gem so small - - Burns 179 

— you what lands our pastor tithes - - Cra. 330 

Asleep, On one - Rog. 239 

Aspasia -.----- Moore 147 

Aspecta Medusa - Ros. 105 

Aspen, House of— a play - - - - - Scott 561 

— Poesy of the ------ Flo. 183 

— tree, The. (Charles Swain.) - - - - Flo. 184 

Asphodel, Poesy of the ----- Flo. 131 

Aspirations of the soul after God (Mme. Guy on) Cow. 623 

Assembly of Foules, The - - . - - Cha. 578 

Associations ------- Mer. 440 

Assume a virtue if you have it not - - Sha. 833 

Assurance - Her. 254 

Astarte Mer. 222 * 

— Syriaca — a sonnet ------ Ros. 303 

Astounded to the guardian of my steps - Dante 317 

Astrsea - Whi. 165 

— at the capital ------ Whi. 265 

— Eedux -------- Dry. 29 

Astrologers, Epitaph on the - Cow. 516 

— study, The Eliot 248 

Astrophel — a pastoral elegy . Spe. 628 

At a solemn music ------ Mil. 416 

— Aix-la-Chapelle, in imperial array - - Sch. 180 

— anchor in Hampton Koads we lay - - Lon. 226 

— - Atri in Abruzzo, a small town - - - Lon. 273 

— Brownhill we always get dainty good cheer Burns 182 

— Drontheim, Olaf the king - Lon. 255 

— early dawn, or rather when the air - - Wor. 240 

— evening to myself I say - Wes. 2Q6 

— eventide -------- Whi. 416 

— every trifle scorn to take offense - - Pope 50 

— every word a reputation dies - - - Pope 72 

— first while sits he Goe. 35 

— Flores in the Azores ----- Ten. 657 

— Francis Allen's on the Christmas eve - Ten. 59 

— Greenwood where through branches green Flo. 302 

— her casement - - - - - - Mer. 442 



41 



Ascension 
Atqui 



At home after the ball ----- Mer. 225 

— home during the ball ----- Mer. 224 

— La Chaudeau ------- Lon. 412 

— last, Dolly, — thanks to a potent - - Moore 516 

— length, dearest Freddy, the moment - Moore 322 

— length, my friend, the far-sent letters - Cow. 554 

— length, my friend (while time with - - Pope 399 

— length, my Lord, I have the bliss - - Moore 486 

— length thy golden hours have winged - Moore 62 

— length we reached folia's sea-girt - - Odys. 136 

— lovers' perjuries they say Jove laughs - Sha. 720 

— midnight by the stream I roved - - Col. 150 

— midnight hour I went, not willingly - - Goe. 72 

— midnight in the month of June - - Poe 89 

— morn, — at noon — at twilight - Poe 79 

— morn, beside your summer sea- - - Moore 525 

— morn, I prayed "I fain would see - - Whi. 239 

— morn the black cock trims his jetty - Scott 117 

— morn the count of G-reiers - Bry. 152 

— morn we placed on his funeral bier - - Cow. 514 

— morning from the sunlight - - - - Mer. 235 

— my fingers' ends. (Twelfth Night.) - - Sha. 282 

— night when all is still around - - - Moore 102 

— one again ------- i n g # 515 

— Paris it was, at the opera - - - - Mer. 218 

— Polwart on the green - Burns 315 

— Sarray in the land of Tartary - - - Cha. 291 

— setting out to preach ----- Wes. 344 

— Stralsund, by the Baltic Sea - - - Lon. 280 

— summer eve, when heaven's ethereal - Cam. 35 

— the corner of Wood Street - - - Wor. 172 

— the creation of the earth — a fragment - She. 504 

— the foot of mountain height - - - Lon. 135 

— the gates of paradise - - - - P. of F. 154 

— the mid-hour of night - - - - Moore 242 

— the silence of twilight's contemplative - Cam. 160 

— the window ------- Ten. 490 

— threescore winters' end I died - Cow. 514 

— Trompyng toun nat fer fro - - - - Cha. 115 

— your age the heyday in - - - Sha. 832 
Athanase, Prince ------ She. 452 

Athanatos (Immortality) - White 267 

Athelric, c. in Harold ----- Ten. 615 

Athelstan, King, lord among earls - - Ten. 722 

Athens, Maid of - - - - - - Byron 243 

Atkinson, Joseph, Epistle to -'-"_- Moore 143 

Atlanta, Howard at Whi. 353 

Atlantic dinner, At the ----- Hoi. 296 

Atossa, cursed with every granted prayer - Pope 235 

Atqui te precor unice per ipsam - - - Her. 577 



Atri 

Awake 



42 



Atri, BeU of ------- Lon. 273 

Attempt and not the deed confounds - - Sha. 793 

Attend all ye who list to hear our - -* - Mac. 141 

Atterbury, Francis, Epitaph on - - - Pope 348 

Attic maid ! with honey fed ... - Cow. 516 

Attitash, Maids of ----- Whi. 305 

AuCafe -------- Mer. 226 

Auchindrane — a tragedy Scott 489 

Auctore Andrea Melvino Her. 549 

Auctorum enumeratione, De - . - Her. 575 

Audley Court - Ten. 72 

Audrey, c. in As You Like It Sha. 205 

Auf Wiedersehen - - . - Lon. 405 ; Low. 352 

August, Lines written in - - - - - Mac. 199 

— (Shepherd's Calendar) - Spe. 547 

— Song for. (Harriet Martineau.) - - - Flo. 472 

— voice, An ------- Bro. 351 

Augusta, Epistle to ----- Byron 225 

— Stanzas to - - - - - - - Byron 224 

— Stanzas to (Byron) Poe 44 

Augustus, Epistle to Pope 297 

Auld Chuckie Reekie's sair distrest - Burns 167 

— comrade dear, and brither sinner - - Burns 170 

— Farmer's New-Year morning - - Burns 71 

— Lang Syne — a song - Burns 213, 334 

— Man, The - Burns 548 

— nature swears, the lovely dears - - Bums 195 

— Rob Morris— a song - - Burns 243, 325 

— Robin Gray, Remarks on - - - - Burns 330 
Aumerle, duke of, c. in Richard ii. - - - Sha. 356 
Aunt, Letter to his White 169 

— Tabitha - - Hoi. 187 

Auranthe, c. in Otho the Great - - - Keats 333 

Aurengezebe, Prologue to - - Dry. 406 

Auri sacra fame, De - - - - - Her. 576 

Aurora Borealis. (Hannah F. Gould.) - - Fav. 191 

— Leigh -------- Bro. 363 

— now, fair daughter of the dawn - - - Biad 185 

— rising from her couch beside - - - Bry. 282 
Auspicious poet, wert thou not my friend - Dry. 283 

— reverence ! Hush all meaner song - - Col. 74 
Austen ! accept a grateful verse from me - Cow. 488 

— Lady, Epistle to - Cow. 401 

— Lady, in rainy weather - Cow. 403 
Austrians entering Naples - Moore 596 

— On defeat of, at Gemappe - - - Burns 181 
Author of evil, unknown till thy revolt - - Mil. 141 

— of life divine ------ Wes. 69 

— of poems, To the, published anonymously Col. 52 

— of Successio, To the ----- Pope 359 



43 



Atri 
Awake 



Authors — a parable - - - - - - Goe. 230 

— portrait, To the — a sonnet - Wor. 246 

— bed-chamber, described --".__ Gol. 133 

— cry and prayer - - - - - - Burns 68 

Autobiographic poems ----- Wes. 1 

Autocrat of breakfast-table, Poems from - Hoi. 161 

Autograph, For an ----- - Low. 339 

Autolycus, a rogue, c. in Winter's Tale - Sha. 304 

Autumn - - - Lon. 7, 91 ; Mer. 255 ; Tho. 105 

— a poem. Hood, 147 ; an ode - - - Hood 142 

— a dirge ------ She. 432 ; Fav. 418 

— departs, but still his mantle's - - - Scott 257 

— Fading- ------- Flo. 275 

— feelings — a song - Goe. 54 

— festival, For an ----- - Whi. 260 

— flowers. (Caroline Southey.) - - - Flo. 474 

— idleness — a sonnet - Ros. 163, 261 

— is old - - - - - - - -Hood 159 

— leaf, Child and the Flo. 507 

— or Hylas and Mgon ----- Pope 34 

— rustleth its decaying robe - Wil. 305 

— Still day in. (Mrs. Whitman.) - - - Flo. 479 

— thoughts ------- Whi. 144 

— To -Keats 236 

— Voice of ------- Bry. 219 

— while into languid winter drooping - - Flo. 92 

— within - Lon. 413 

— woods . . Bry. 68 

Autumnal evening, An - - - - - Col. 36 

— moon, To the Col. 98 

Auvergne, countess of, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 

Aux Italiens - Mer. 218 

Avarice - - - - - . - - - Her. 162 

— Last stage of - - Wor. 485 

Avaruset Plutus. (Fable of Gay.) - - Cow. 648 

Avaunt all specious pliancy - Wor. 281 

Ave - - - - Ros. 32 

— Maria ! bright and pure - Pro. 389 

— Maria ! maiden mild ! - - - - - Scott 133 
Avenel, White Lady of, Songs of - Scott 424 
Avenge, O Lord ! thy slaughtered saints - Mil. 479 

Avenger, The - P. of F. 156 

Avenging and bright ----- Moore 239 

Avery, parson, Swan-song of - - - - Whi. 229 

Avis --------- Hoi. 142 

Avon, a precious and immortal name - - Wor. 388 

— river, To the Lon. 409 

— The— a sonnet Wor. 388 

Awa' wi' your witchcraft - Burns 287 

Awake, arise ! or be forever fallen ! - - - Mil. 24 



Awake a a 

Balance ^^ 

Awake ! arise ! the door is late - - - Lon. 410 

— arise ! the hour is come ----- Mac. 150 

— arise ! thy light is come - Moore 349 

— my St. John ! leave all meaner - Pope 187 

— sad heart, whom sorrow ever drowns - Her. 203 

— sweet harp of Judah - White 354 

— thy cloud-harp, angel of the rain - - Fa v. 186 

— to life, my dulcet shell - Moore 53 
Away and away, o'er the deep-sounding tid£ Fav. 103 

— away ! the dream was vain - - - - Mer. 205 

— away ! ye notes of woe ------ Byron 246 

— away ! you men of rules - Moore 48 

— away ! your nattering arts - - , - Byron 132 

— away — you're aU the same - - - Moore 192 

— despair, my gracious Lord doth hear - Her. 250 

— my needless fears ------ Wes. 36 

— the moor is dark beneath the moon - - She. 395 

— those cloudy looks, that laboring sigh - Col. 55 

— thou swarthy witch ! go forth - - - Goe. 123 

— though still thy sword is red - Hem. 261 

— with death— away White 267 

— with my fears Wes. 14 

— with your fictions of flimsy - Byron 137 

— ye gay landscapes, ye gardens - - Byron 158 
Awhile the spirit paused in ecstasy - - She. 571 
Ay, an you had one eye behind you - - Sha. 291 

— and I taught thee the word and the spell Scott 425 

— be merry all birds, to-day - Ten. 491 

— but to die and go we know not where - Sha. 78 

— call it holy ground ------ Hem. 416 

— down to the dust with them - - - Moore 596 

— every inch a king ------ Sha. 871 

— for the soul is better than its frame - - Wil. 306 

— freedom is a noble thing - Fav. 325 

— gloriously thou standest there - - - Bry. 86 

— I saw her, we have met ... - i n g # 355 

— maiden the whole of my story - - - Mer. 278 

— me, to whom shall I my case complain - Spe. 631 

— pale and silent maiden . _ . Low. 18 

— tear her tattered ensign down - - - Hoi. 1 

— there's the rub ------ Sha. 826 

— this is freedom! these pure skies - - - Bry. 165 

— thou art for the grave - - - - Bry. 54 

— thou art welcome, heaven's delicious Bry. 99 ; Flo. 501 

Aylmer's Field Ten. 357 

Ayr, Bonny banks of— a song - - - Burns 203 

— Brigs of .-_-.__ Burns 96 
AYTOUN, WILLIAM E., Poems of: 

Blind Old Milton . . . . 159 I Burial March of Dundee . .71 

Bruce, Heart of the . . . 46 Buried Flower .... 178 



45 



Awake 
Balance 



Charles Edward at Versailles 
Charon, Refusal of 
Constantine Kanaris, Epitaph of 
Culloden, Anniversary of . 
Danube and the Euxihe 
Dundee, Burial March of . 

— Viscount of 

Edinburgh after Flodden . 
Epitaph of Constantine Kanaris . 
Execution of Montrose 
Glencoe, Widow of 
Heart of the Bruce 
Hermotimus 



Island of the Scots . 
Montrose, Execution of 

CEnone 

Old Camp, The . 
— Scottish Cavalier 
Refusal of Charon 
Scheik of Sinai. 
Scots, Island of the 
Scottish Cavalier, Old . 
Versailles, Charles Edward at 
Viscount of Dundee 
Widow of Glencoe 



. 100 

29 

. 1TB 

188 
. 156 

200 
. 194 

100 
. 156 

134 

. 202 

87 



Azar and Abraham P. of F. 34 

Aziola, The ------- She. 440 

Azrael. Tales of Wayside Inn- - Lon. 293 

— and the Indian prince - - - -P. of F. 71 



Babe Christabel. (Gerald Massey.) - - - Fav. 352 

Baby figure of the giant mass - - - Sha. 628 

— The. (anon.) ------- Fav. 169 

Babylon, By the rivers of Byron 195 

Babylonia - - . . Mer. 248 

Baccalaureus, c. in Faust ... - Fau. 170 

Bacchus in the pillory Sch. 299 

Bachelor's dream Hood 371 

— private journal, From a Hoi. 78 
Back-looking memory and prophet - - Bro. 65 

— ye phantoms of the past - Pro. 160 

Backing the favorite Hood 533 

Bacon, an innkeeper, Epigram on - - - Burns 182 

— F.,. Letters to - - - - Her. 501, 509, 511, 586 

— Henry. The flowers ----- Fav. 221 
Bad in the best, tho' excellent - Sha. 1051 

— monarchs, The ------ Sch. 324 

Badajos, Plain of Scott 384 

Bag of Gold, The (Italy) Rog. 143 

— The - - - - - - - - - Her. 250 

Bagenhall, Sir Ralph, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

Bagot, a servant, c. in Richard ii. - - - Sha. 356 

Bailey, Philip James. Country and patriotism Fav.' 62 

Measure of life Fav. 253 

Sabbath morning in the country - - Fav. 258 

Thoughts - Fav. 224 

Time and its changes - Fav. 308 

Waning spirit Fav. 86 

Woman's four seasons - Fav. 239 

Worldly treasures Fav. 187 

Baily, Thomas Haynes. We met - - - Fav. 344 

Baird, Rev. G. , Letter to - - - - Burns 465 

Bala-Sala, Isle of Man — a sonnet - - - Wor. 403 

Balaklava, Charge of Heavy Brigade at - - Ten. 728 

Balance of Europe — an epigram - - - Pope 397 



Baldwin A a 

Basselin ^ u 

Baldwin, Earl, c. in Otho the Great - - - Keats 408 

Ball, At home after the Mer. 225 

— At home during the ----- Mer. 224 
Ballad of Babie Bell. (T. B. Aldrich.) - - Fav. 442 

— of Carmilhan, The Lon. 280 

— of dead ladies Ros. 136 

— ofOriana Ten. 20 

— of the Boston tea-party ... - Hoi. 247 

— of the dark lady Col. 149 

— of the French fleet ----- Lon. 376 

— of the oysterman ------ Hoi. 83 

— of the village without painting - - - Cha. 597 

— sent to king Richard - - - - - Cha. 596 

— stanzas -------- Moore 192 

— The _ . . Moore 77 

Ballads - Goe. 100; Whi. 202, 218, 270 

— and other poems - - . - - - - Lon. 25 

— and songs - Moore 647 

— Heron election — a song - Burns 279 
Ballantine, James. Castles in the air - - Fav. 347 
Ballantyne, John, Letters to - Burns, 352, 361, 363, 367 
Ballochmyle, Lass of — a song - - - Burns 202 
Baltasar, innkeeper, c. in Spanish Student - Lon. 44 
Balthasar, c. in Much Ado about Nothing - Sha. Ill 

— servant of Portia, c. in Mer. of Venice - Sha. 181 

— servant of Romeo, c. in Romeo and Juliet - Sha. 712 
Balthazar, c. in Comedy of Errors - - Sha. 93 

— The Monkes Tale Cha. 461 

Banditti (Italy) ------ R g. 128 

Bangor, Old, Monastery of - Wor. 356 

Bangor's march, Monks of . - - - - Scott 412 

Banish plump Jack and banish all - - - Sha. 349 

Banished and returning count - - - Goe. 102 

Bank and government — an amatory colloquy Moore 615 

— note, On a------- Burns 93 

Banker's dinner, The ------ Hoi. Ill 

Bankes is weak, and Goulburn too - - Moore 626 

Banks of Cree, The Burns 262 

— of Doon— a song ----- Burns 203, 240 

— of Forth— a song ----- Burns 310 

— of Nith— a song Burns 225 

— of the Devon— a song - - - - Burns 207 

— of the Tweed," Remarks on - - - Burns 294 
Banner of England, not for a season - - Ten. 661 

Banners flout the sky Sha. 789 

Bannockburn, Bruce's address at - - Burns 257 

Bannocks o' Barley — a song - Burns 273 

Banquet, The - - Her. 284 

— The. (L. E. Landon.) - Fav. 318 

— to Chinese embassy, At the, 1868 - - - Hoi. 257 



A h .Baldwin 

^ * Basselin 

Banquet to grand-duke Alexis - Hoi. 256 

— to Japanese embassy ----- Hoi. 258 
Banquo, a general, c. in Macbeth - - - Sha. 788 
Baptisia Seni, c. in The Piccolomini - - Col. 407 
Baptism — a sonnet ------ Wor. 376 

— Holy -------- Her. 126 

— of Christ -------- Wil. 37 

— On witnessing a - - - - - - Wil. 70 

Baptismi Eitu, De S - - - - - - Her. 563 

Baptisms. (The Parish Register.) - - Cra. 260 

Baptista, a gentleman, c. in Taming of the S. Sha. 229 

Barbara Frietchie ------ Whi. 269 

Barbarians oft endeavor ----- Goe. 262 

Barbauld, Anna L. Life's good-morning - Fav. 422 

Barbour, John. Freedom ----- Fav. 325 

— Burial of ------- Whi. 211 

Barclay of Ury - - Whi. 121 

Bard of brief days, but ah, of deathless - White 214 

— of the Fleece, whose skillful genius - - Wor. 229 
Bardolph, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 382 

— Lord, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - Sha. 409 

— a sharper, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor Sha. 42 

— a c. in Henry v. ----- - Sha. 439 

Bard's epitaph - - - - - - - Burns 90 

— incantation ------- Scott 374 

— of olden time ------ Sch. 229 

Bare the mean heart that lurks behind a star Pope 281 

Barefoot boy, The ----- - Whi. 195 

Barefooted Friar. (Ivanhoe.) - - - - Scott 420 

Barker, David. Make your mark - - Fav. 259 

Barmecides, Mourner for - Hem. 394 

Barnard, F. A. P., To - - - - - Whi. 341 

Barnardine, c. in Measure for Measure - - Sha. 67 

Baron Castine of St. Castine - Lon. 288 

Baroni, To Leonora. (Milton.) - Cow. 571 

Barreges -------- Lon. 391 

Barren spring— a sonnet ----- Ros. 267 

Bariere, c. in Fall of Robespierre - - - Col. 382 
Barry Cornwall (pseud.). See Procter, Bryan W. 

Bartlett, John, To ----- - Low. 366 

— William Francis ------ Whi. 411 

Bartley , Mrs. , Spoken by - - - - - Cam. 179 

Bartolome Roman, c. inSpanish Student - Lon. 44 

Barton, Bernard. The ivy - Flo. 180 

To a crocus ------ Fi . 30 

To the passion-flower - Flo. 200 

Base is the slave that pays - Sha. 444 

Baseless fabric of this vision - Sha. 16 

Bassanio, c. in Merchant of Venice - - Sha. 181 

Basselin, Oliver - Lon. 217 



Basset iQ 

Beautiful ' ±0 

Basset, of Lancaster, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - Sha. 469 

— table, The ------- p pe 363 

Bassianus, c. in Titus Andronicus - - Sha. 688 

Bastard of Orleans, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - Sha. 469 

Bastille, Place de la, Paris — a sonnet - - Eos. 301 

Bastwick, c. in Charles the First - - - She. 491 

Bates, a soldier, c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 

Bath, Epigram on a, by Plato - Cow. 517 

Bathurst, lord, Epistle to Pope 239 

Battered and bankrupt fortunes mended - Cow. 302 

— beauty, Epigram on a - Cow. 521 
Battle autumn of 1862 ----- Whi. 265 

— field, The - - - - - - . - Bry. 181 

— of Ancram Moor - - - - - - Scott 655 

— of BeaP an Duine ----- Scott 155 

— of Brunanburh ------ Ten. 722 

— of Killiecrankie — a song - Burns 228 

— of Lora. -------- Oss. 391 

— of Moncontour ------ Mac. 153 

— of Naseby Mac. 155 

— of Sempach ------- Scott 365 

— of Sheriff -Muir— a song ----- Burns 223 

— of the Baltic ------ Cam. 146 

— of the bards ------- Mer. 312 

— of the gods ------- Iliad 405 

— of the Grecian Wall Iliad 260 

— of the Lake Begillus ----- Mac. 56 

— of Waterloo — a sonnet ----- Wor. 286 

— The - - - - - - - ' - Sch. 38 

— The. (Marmion.) ------ Scott 95 

Battle's magnificently-stern array - - Byron 305 

Baucis, c. in Faust ------ p a u. 170 

Bavaria, Duke of, c. in House of Aspen - Scott 562 

— On leaving a scene in - Cam. 245 
Bay, The. (Eliza Cook.) - Flo. 153 

— Poesy of the - - - - - - - Flo. 150 

Bayadere, God and the — a ballad - - - Goe. 140 

Be happy, child, the last wild words - - Mer. 443 

— hopeful Spring the favorite of the soiil - Wor. 426 

— hushed, be hushed — a ballad - - White 316 

— it according to thy word - Wes. 300 

— it my only wisdom here - - Wes. 282 

— just, and fear not ----- gha. 612 

— merry, all birds, to-day - Ten. 491 

— noble, and the nobleness that lies - - Low. 20 

— not the first by whom the new' are tried Pope 49 

— not thou silent now at length - - - Mil. 496 

— nought dismayed that her" unmoved - - Spe. 688 

— pitiful, O God" Bro. 271 

— pleased that nature made thee - - - Wor. 106 



A_Q Basset 

^^ Beautiful 

Be somewhat scanter of your presence - Sha. 816 

— stirring man while yet the day - - - Goe. 368 

— strong - - - - - - - - Pro. 72 

— sure, I love thee always for thy love - - Arn. 79 

— the serpent under't ----- Sha. 791 

— the sweetest his have seen - Bro. 101 

— this the chosen site ----- Wor. 379 

— thou as chaste as ice Sha. 826 

— thou familiar, but by no means vulgar - Sha. 815 

— thou the rainbow of the storms - - Byron 24 

— void of feeling ! ------ Goe. 162 

— wise as thou art cruel ; do not press - - Sha. 1045 
Beadle to a humorous sigh - Sha. 143 
Beal' an Duine, Battle of - - - - Scott 155 
Beams of noon, like burning lances - - Whi. 77 

— of the daybreak faint ! I hail - - White 25 
Bear him, comrades, to his grave - - - Whi. 211 

— me to the sacred scene ----- Wes. 283 

— witness, Erin ! when thine injured isle - She. 569 
Beard, Thomas, On death of Wes. 149 
Bearer of freedom's holy light - Whi. 105 
Bearing meek all ills which flow - Arn. 119 
Beatrice -------- Lon. 19 

— c. in The Cenci ------ She. 268 

— c. in Much Ado about Nothing - - - Sha. Ill 
Beau," On a spaniel called- - - - -Cow. 503 

— Tibbs. a character — an essay - - - Gol. 423 
Beaufort, Henry, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - - Sha. 469 

— John, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 

— Thomas, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 
Beaumont and Fletcher. The rose - Flo. 516 

— it was thy wish that I should - - Wor. 227 

— Sir G. H., Epistle to - - - - -Wor. 445 

— Lady, To— a sonnet ----- Wor. 237 

Beau's reply ------- Cow. 503 

Beauteous flower — a ballad - Goe. 110 

— is earth, but all its forest broods - • Arn. 155 

— rosebud, young and gay - Burns 110 
Beauties of nature. (Burns.) - - - Fav. 195 
Beautiful apparition ! go not hence ! - - - Lon. 344 

-boy at play- ------ Wil. 307 

— child of a tropic sun ----- Flo. 170 

— cloud ! with folds as soft - Bry. 72 

— Evelyn Hope is dead. (Browning.) - - Fav. 376 

— eyes, and shall I see no more - - - Ing. 400 

— lily, dwelling by still rivers - Lon. 317 

— night— a song ------ Goe. 38 

— picture, On a — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 228 

— Radna, jasmine-bosomed Radna - - I. S. S. 15 

— spring, To a - - Col. 35 

4 



Beautiful ka 

Belfry 0U 

Beautiful, The. (Burrington.) - - - Fav. 168 

— tyrant, fiend angelical - - - - - Sha. 727 

— valley ! through venose verdant - - Lon. 360 

— youth, On a - - - - - - - Gol. 136 

Beauty - Eos. 141 

— a living presence - - - - - Wor. 897 

— and the bird -------- Ros. 163 

— conflict of wit and ------ Goe. 241 

— deserves the homage Tho. 398 

— heavenly, Hymn of ----- gp e . 662 

— Hymn in honor of Spe. 653 

— is but a vain and doubtful good - - - Sha. 1051 

— is unripe childhood's cheat - - -, Fav. 386 

— like hers is genius -,---- Eos. 235 

— On -------- Tho. 398 

— on my hearthstone blazing ! - - - -Low. 363 

— provoketh thieves sooner than gold - - Sha. 210 

— too rich for use for earth too dear - - Sha. 718 

— truth and rarity ------ Sha. 1054 

Beauty's ensign yet is crimson -•-'-- Sha. 738 

— pageant — a sonnet Eos. 235 

Beaver brook ------- Low. 100 

Becalmed - Lon. 402 

Because - Pro. 191 

— I feel that in the heavens ----- Poe 77 

— our talk was of the cloud control - - - Eos. 249 

— things seen are mightier than things heard Ten. 353 

— thou hast the power ----- Bro. 163 

— you have thrown off - - - - - Mil. 470 

Bed, To my ------- Burns 127 

Bedford, Duke of, c. in Henry v. Sha, 439 

c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - Sha. 469 

Bedingrield, Sir Henry, c. in Queen Mary Ten. 537 

Beds of sweet roses," Eemarks on - - Burns 295 

Bee, Sura of the P. of F. 84 

Beech tree's perdition ----- Cam. 220 

Beecher, Eev. J. T., To - - - - Byron 167 

Beelzebub, Address of - Burns 83 

Before a court of justice — a ballad - - - G-oe. 118 

— his Hon court ------ g c ^. 183 

— I saw Clarinda's face - Burns 113 

— I see another day ------ Wor. 108 

— I send this scrawl away - Moore 307 

— I trust my fate to thee ----- Pro. 44 

— man made us citizens - - - - - Low. 83 

— my sight appeared with opened wings - Dante 306 

— the battle - Moore 229 

— the fiery sun ------ Hem. 309 

— the gates there sat on either side - - Mil. 52 

— the vsaints to glory go - Wes. 275 



51 



Beautiful 
Belfry 



Before the starry threshold of Jove's court - Mil. 434 

— the stout harvesters falleth the grain - Fav. 416 

— the world had passed — a sonnet - - Wor. 443 

— this world's great frame -■.-_- Spe. 659 

— those cruel twins whom at one birth - She. 346 

— we sketch the present, let us cast - Moore 500 
Begbie, Miss Eliza, Letters to - - Burns 345, 347, 348 
Beggar, A Pro. 437 

— maid, The Ten. 115 

— that I am, I am Sha. 822 

— The -------- Low. 5 

Beggarly account of empty boxes - - - Sha. 736 

Beggars - - Wor. 174 

Beginner, The ------ P. of F. 121 

Begone, thou fond presumptuous elf - - Wor. 142 

— ye critics and restrain your spite - - Pope 359 
Begot in the ventricle of memory - - Sha. 145 
Beguiled into forgetfulness of caro - - - Wor. 435 

Behavior, Eules for Gol. 421 

Behind us at our evening meal - - - Whi. 322 

— yon hills, where Lugar flows - - - Burns 190 
Behold, a giant am I ! - Lon. 400 

— a pupil of the monkish gown - - - Wor. 359 

— ambitious of the British bays - Pope 398 

— a.n emblem of our human mind - - Wor. 470 

— Fiametta, shown in vision here - - - Eos. 302 

— her, single in the field - Wor. 257 

— my love, the curious gem - - - Moore 142 

— not him we knew I ----- - Hoi. 145 

— the child, by nature's kindly law - - Pope 201 

— the hour — a song ----- Burns 232 

— the rocky wall ------ Hoi. 141 

— the shape our eyes have known - - Hoi. 298 

— the sun ------- Moore 346 

— the Tiber!" the vain Roman cried - - Scott 454 

— the woes of matrimonial life -> Pope 485 

— within the leafy shade - Wor. 79 
Beholding youth and hope - - Eos. 272 

Behrisch, Odes to - Goe. 160 

Being myself captived here in care - - - Spe. 699 

— of beings, make ------ Wes. 241 

— one day at my window all alone - - - Spe. 685 

— pursued by the dragoons - Burns 339 

— weary of love, I flew to the grove - Moore 657 

— your slave, what should I do — a sonnet - Sha. 1035 
Belarius, c. inCymbeline ----- Sha. 944 
Belch, Sir Tobey, c. in Twelfth Night - - Sha. 281 
Beleaguered city, The ----- Lon. 5 
.Belfry of Bruges ------ Lon. 77 

— pigeon, The Wil. 73 



Believe ko 

Better °* 

Believe it or not, as you choose - - - Cow. 491 

— me, if all those endearing young charms Moore 225 
Believer in worldly business - Wes. 85 
Belinda, To — a song - - - - - - Goe. 49 

Belisarius Lon. 362 

BeU of Atri -------- Lon. 273 

— Song of the - - - - - - - Sch. 207 

— thou soundest merrily ----- Lon. 29 

Bellav, Visions of - - - - - - Spe. 683 

Belles of Mauchline, The - Burns 37 

Belli potens virgo, septem regina trionum - Mil. 562 

Bells of Lynn ------- Lon. 320 

— of San Bias - - - - - - - Lon. 411 

— The- - - - - Hoi. 102; Poe 60; Fav. 388 
Beloved amid the earnest woes - - - Poe 105 

— friend, who living many years - - Bro. 93 

— in the noisy city — sonnet - Low. 22 

— my beloved, when I think - - - Bro. 157 

— thou hast brought me many flowers - - Bro. 164 

— vale ! I said — a sonnet - . - Wor. 226 
Below the thunders of the upper deep - - Ten. 473 

— thir stanes lie Jamie's banes - - - Burns 186 

— this marble monument is laid - Dry. 318 
Belshazzar, Vision of - - - - . - Byron 194 
Belshazzar's feast ----- Hem. 280 
Beltran Cruzado, c. in Spanish Student - Lon. 44 
Ben Battle was a soldier bold - - - Hood 361 

— Lomond - - - ■ - - - - Cam. 304 

— Nevis — a sonnet ----- Keats 255 

Benbow - - Cra. 419 

Bend thy blue course, O stream - - - Oss. 482 

Bended bow, The ------ Hem. 136 

Bending of Ulysses' bow, The - Odys. 292 

Beneath a hohn, repaired two jolly swains Vir. 38 

— the blaze of a tropical sun - - - Col. 221 

— the concave of an April sky - - - Wor. 205 

— the forest's skirt I rest ----- Bry. 33 

— the low-hung night-cloud - Whi. 379 

— the milk-white thorn - Burns 52 

— the moonlight and the snow - - - Whi. 372 

— the shade a spreading beech displays - - Pope 34 

— the shade which beechen boughs diffuse - Vir. 13 

— the trees -------- Low. 381 

— the waning moon I walk at night - - Bry. 137 

— these fruit-tree boughs that shed - - - Wor. 146 

— this starry arch ------ Flo. 47 

— yon birch with silver bark - Col. 149 

— yon eastern ridge, the craggy bound - Wor. 466 
Bonedicito -------- Whi. 163 

Benedick, the married man - - Sha. 130 



k o Believe 

°3 Better 

Beneficent, The - - - - - - P. of F. 91 

Bengo, Mr., Letter to ----- Burns 415 

Benjamin, Park. Press on! - Fav. 69 

Bennet, Sir William, Epistle to - Tho. 377 

Bensley, Mr., Prologue spoken by - - - Gol. 179 

Benson, Miss, Letter to - - - - - Burns 487 

Bentinck, lord William, Inscription to - - Mac. 209 

Benvenuto Cellini, c. in Michaelangelo - Lon. 436 

Benvolio, c. in Romeo and Juliet - - - She. 712 

Bequest of the Persian faith - - - - Goe. 383 

Bereavement - - She. 556 

— a sonnet ------- Bro. 81 

Berengarius, On the last words of - - - Col. 216 

Bergamo, Lombardy ----- Rog. 31 

Berkeley, George. Old world and new - - Fav. 427 

— Lord, c. in Richard ii. - Sha. 356 

— a gentleman, c. in Richard iii. - - - Sha. 556 
Berkshire festival, Lines at the - - - Hoi. 35 

— Horticultural Society, For meeting of Hoi. 134 
Bernardo, an officer, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 

— son of Francesco, c. in The Cenci - - She. 268 

— delCarpio ------- Hem. 223 

Berrathon - Oss. 483 

Bertha in the lane ------ Bro. 141 

Bertram, c. in All's Well that Ends Wei - Sha. 254 

— of Ebersdorf, c. in House of Aspen - - Scott 562 
Beryl-songs ------ Ros. 174, 182, 191 

Beshrew that heart that makes my heart - Sha. 1044 

Beside a massive gateway built - - - Bry. 260 

— a stricken field I stood - Whi. 263 

— that milestone where the level sun - - Whi. 417 

— the river of tears Bry. 156 

— the ungathered rice he lay - Lon. 41 

— this Duncan hath borne his faculties - Sha. 792 
Bess and her spinning-wheel — a song - Burns 238 

— the gawkie, Remarks on - - - - Burns 294 
Best and brightest, come away - - - She. 444 

— image of myself, and dearer half - - Mil. 112 

— medicines, The — an aphorism - - - Lon. 93 

— men are molded out of faults - - - Sha. 91 

— The — an epigram ------ Goe. 223 

— State-constitution Sch. 259 

— thing in the world ----- Bro. 603 

Bestow, dear Lord, upon our youth - - Cow. 67 

Bestower, The - - - - - - . P. of F. 44 

Bethlehem, Star of Whi. 87 

— Star of ------- White 357 

Bethlen Bathay, c. in Zapolya - - - Col. 250 

Bette, Sir Simon, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 

Better be with the dead ----- Sha. 798 



Better ka 

Black ° 4 

Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle - Ten. 93 

— moments ------- WH. 276 

— part of valor is discretion - - Sha. 408 
Bettering of my mind. (Tempest.) - - Sha. 2 
Bettine, friend of Goethe, To - Bro. 267 
Between Adam and me the great difference Moore 338 

— Holmscote and Hurstcote - Eos. 107 

— nose and eyes a strange contest - - Cow. 397 

— the acting of a dreadful - Sha. 769 

— the dark and the daylight - Lon. 225 ; Fav. 380 

— the hands, between the brows - - Eos. 145 

— two hawks, which flies the higher pitch - Sha. 477 

— two kinds of food, both equally - - Dante 253 

— two sister moorland rills --_.-_ Wor. 152 

— wheatfield and corn - - - - - Goe. 53 
Betwixt mine eye and heart a league - - Sha. 1033 

— the wind and his nobility - Sha. 385 
Bevis, George, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - Sha. 496 
Bewail not much, my parents ! me the prey Cow. 515 
Beware! -------- Lon. 23 

— beware of witchery ! - - - - - Mer. 192 

— my friend ! of crystal brook - - - Cow. 521 

— my lord, of jealousy Sha. 894 

— of bonny Aim — a song - Burns 223 

— of building ! I intended - Cow. 497 

— of entrance to a quarrel - Sha. 815 

— the Ides of March ----- sh a> 755 

— the Israelite of old ------ Lon. 44 

Bewcastle now must keep the hold - - - Scott 246 

Beyond -------- p r0 . 216 

Bianca among the nightingales - - - Bro. 596 

— dtr. of Baptista, c. in Taming of Shrew - Sha. 229 

— fair Bianca ! — who could dwell - - - Hood 330 

— mistress of Cassio, c. in Othello - - Sha. 879 
Bianca's dream ------- Hood 330 

Bible, Translation of the - Wor. 368 

Biblical passages, Hymns on - Wes. 231 

Bibliolatres - - Low. 99 

Bid adieu, my sad heart ----- Cow. 32 

— them achieve me - Sha. 459 
Bide ye yet," Eemarks on - - - - Burns 314 
Big round tears, coursed one another - - Sha. 210 

Biglow papers Low. 159 

Bigot, Lord, c. in King John - Sha. 332 

Bigotry, Against ----._ Wes. 183 

Bigotry's victim - - She. 565 

Bill and Joe -------- Hoi. 207 

— of mortality, For the yearly - - - Cow. 441 
Billaud Varennes, c. in Fall of Eobespierre - Col. 382 
Binding nature fast in fate - Pope 221 



55 



Better 
Jblack 



Binding sheaves ------- Ing. 442 

Bindo Altoviti, c. in Michelangelo - - Loii. 454 

Bingen on the Rhine. (Mrs. E. C. Norton.) - Fav. 371 

Bion, Death of— fragment of elegy - - She. 534 

— From, Death of Adonis ----- She. 534 

Biondello, c. in Taming of the Shrew - - Sha. 229 

Biorn's beckoners - - - - - - Low. 354 

Birch-tree, The ------ Low. 80 

Bird and the ship - Lon. 22 

— at sunset - - - - - - Mer. 462 

— let loose, The ------ Moore 341 

— of paradise, On a drawing of - Wor. 438 

— of paradise, Suggested by a - - - - Wor. 209 
Birdie's song, The (anon.) - Flo. 465 
Birdofredum Sawin. See Biglow papers. 

Birds, joyous birds of the wandering wing - Hem. 425 

— of Kilhngworth, The - Lon. 268 

— love and bird's song ----- Ten. 490 

— of omen dark and foul ----- Scott 419 

— of passage ------- Hem. 425 

— of passage - - Lon. 131, 211, 225, 228, 358, 372 

— release, The - ----- - Hem. 124 

Birks of Aberfeldy, The — a song - - - Burns 204 

Biron, a lord, c. in Love's Labor's Lost - - Sha. 135 

Birth-bond, The — a sonnet - Ros. 234 

— of a posthumous child - Burns 134 

— of flattery, The ----- - Cra. 489 

Birthday festival to J. R. Lowell - - - Hoi. 144 

— flowers (anon.) ----- Flo. 508 

— gifts -------- p r o. 432 

— of Daniel Webster ----- Hoi. 139 

— of Mrs. ____-- -Moore 94 

— On his - - - - - - - - Wes. 14 

— Sixty-third Wor. 390 

— tribute to J. Freeman Clarke - - - Hoi. 144 

— verses Wil. 90 

— walk - Ing. 432 

Biscayan, Feelings of a noble — a sonnet - - Wor. 281 

Bishop Sigurd at Satten Fiord - - - Lon. 254 

Bishops and priests — a sonnet - - - Wor. 375 

Bishopstone, Antiquities discovered at - Wor. 245 

Bitter-sweet Her. 273 

Black and blue eyes ----- Moore 647 

— are the Moors before Kazan - Lon. 337 

— Comb, Inscription on a stone at - - Wor. 467 
View from top of Wor. 198 

— demons hovering o'er his mitered head - Wor. 362 

— eagle, the, Remarks on - Burns 329 

— headed eagle, The Burns 181 

— job, A Hood 407 



Black zn 

Body's ol) 

Black knight, The - - - - - - Lon. 24 

— knight's song. (Ivanhoe.) - Scott 422 

— prince, To the. (Rob Roy.) - - - Scott 414 

— shadows fall ------- Lon. 131 

— stones of Iona — a sonnet - Wor. 407 
Blackbird, The - - - - - - - Ten. 54 

Blackett, J., Monody on - White 230 

Blacklock, Dr. , Epistle to - - - - Burns 171 

Letter to ------ Burns 422 

remarks on his songs - - - -Burns 293 

Blair, Hugh. Dissertation on poems of Ossian Oss. 88 
Letter to ----- - Burns 374 

— James Hunter, On death of - - Burns 107 
Blaithrie o't, the, Remarks on - - - Bums 302 
Blaize, Mrs. Mary — an elegy - Gol. 135 
Blake, William, Sonnet on - Ros. 295 
Blanc, Mont ------- She. 400 

Blanch of Spain, niece of John - - - Sha. 332 

Bland as the morning breath of June - - Whi. 109 

Blaney, Life of - - - - - - - Cra. 409 

Blank leaf of "Pleasures of Memory," On - Byron 249 

— leaf, On a — a sonnet ----- Wor. 229 

— sheet of paper, To a - - - - - Hoi. 81 
Blasco, c. in Spanish Gypsy -.-'-- Eliot 154 
Bleating blindly toward the knife of death P. of P. 92 
Bless God, ye happy lands - Pro. 379 

— love and hope. Full many - - - Ros. 248 

— the redeemer Cardoness - - - Burns 185 

— thee ! thou art translated - Sha. 169 

— thou, dread Creator ----- Q-oe. 370 
Blessed are they that mourn - - - Bry. 35 

— damozel -------- Ros. 11 

— is the man who has not walked astray - Mil. 483 

— yet sinful one, and broken-hearted ! - - Bry. 139 
Blessing, honor, thanks, and praise - - Wes. 143 

— the cornfields ------- Lon. 170 

Blessings on thee, little man - Whi. 195 

Blessington, Lady. The honeysuckle - - Flo. 132 

Blest as the immortal gods, is he - - - Burns 305 

— be M. Murdo to his latest day - - Burns 180 

— be the God of love ----- Her. 147 

— be the God whose tender care - - - Wes. 82 

— infant of eternity !----- Moore 162 

— is the babe that dies within the womb - Mer. 270 

— is the man whom the merciful gods - Sch. 236 

— is this isle— our native land - Wor. 454 

— land of Judaea ! thrice hallowed of song Whi. 82 

— order, which in power doth so excel - - Her. 260 

— pair of sirens, pledges of heaven's joy - Mil. 416 

— paper-credit, last and best supply - - Pope 242 



K7 Black 

° * Body's 

Blest power of sunshine ! genial day ! - - MoOre 446 

— statesman, he, whose mind's unselfish - Wor. 439 

— who far from all mankind - - - Cow. 628 
Blind Bartimeus ------- Lon. 38 

— girl of Castel-Cuille Lon. 135 

— Highland boy - Wor. 261 

— man's buff — a song G-oe. 23 

— old Milton - - Ayt. 159 

Blindness of H. S. Boyd - Bro. 93 

— Sonnet on his - - Mil. 480 

Blink o'er the Burn," Eemarks on - - Burns 309 

Bliss of absence — a song ----- Goe. 40 

— of sorrow — a song Goe. 61 

Blithe hae I been — a song - - - - Burns 253 

— blithe, and merry was she - Burns 206 

— young Bess to Jean (Muirhead) - - Burns 294 
Blithesome bridal ------ Burns 309 

Blondel, Scenes from lif e of Low. 380 

— Song of ------- Scott 450 

Bloody vest, The. (Talisman.)- - - - Scott 450 

Bloomfield, Robert, Epigram on - - - White 365 

Blooming Nelly — a song - Burns 224 

Blossom, On observing a - - Col. 60 ; Fav. 463 

Blossomed the lovely stars, the forget-me-nots Lon. 101 

Blossoming of solitary date-tree - - - Col. 220 

Blossoms, To. (Herrick.) - - - Fav. 328; Flo. 34 

Blount, Martha, on her birthday - - Pope 380 

— Sir James, c. in Richard hi. - - - - Sha. 556 

— Teresa, Epistle to - Pope 337, 340 
Blow, blow, thou winter wind - - - - Sha. 215 

— winds and crack your cheeks - - - Sha. 862 

— ye the trumpet, gather from afar - - Ten. 481 
Blue against the bluer heavens - - - Pro. 264 

— eyed lassie, The — a song - - - Burns 221 

— flowers. (Caroline Eustis.) - - - Flo. 420 

— stocking — comic opera - - - - Moore 298 

— was the loch, the clouds were gone - - Rog. 247 
Bluebeard -------- Mer. 268 

Blunt, Sir Walter, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - Sha. 382 

Boadicea - - - - - - - - Ten. 393 

— an ode ------- Cow. 432 

Boast on, my friend — though stripped - Moore 279 

Boat-glee — a song Moore 298 

— on the Serchio She. 475 

— song. (Lady of the Lake.) - - - Scott 125 
Bob o' Dunblaine," Remarks on Burns 339 

— Southey ! You're a poet - Byron 317 
Boccaccio, Translations from - - - - Dry. 434 
Bodham, Anne, To my cousin - - - Cow. 494 
Body's beauty— a sonnet Ros. 265 



Boileau k q 

Brandon °° 

Boileau, Verbatim from - Pope 378 

Bold dragoon, The ----- - Scott 384 

— is the man, who in this nicer age - - Tho. 477 

— knights and fair dames - Scott 361 

— words affirmed, in days when faith - - Wor. 402 
Boleyn, Anne, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 
Bolingbroke, Henry, c. in Richard ii. - - Sha. 356 

— a conjurer, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - Sha. 496 
Bologna, Italy ------ Rog. 73 

— Italy — a sonnet Wor. 440 

Bolton, Dr. Pope 382 

— priory, Founding of Wor. 423 
Bona, sister of the French queen - - - Sha. 526 
Bonaparte, Napoleon - - - - - ' - Ten. 477 

Fall of She. 397 

Ode to ------ Byron 197 

Bonds of affection. (L. E. Landon.) - - Fav. 278 

Bone of my bone thou art and from - - Mil. 215 

Bonner, Edmund, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 

Bonnivard, Francois de. (Prisoner of Chillon.) Byron 82 

Bonny banks of Ayr — a song - - - - Burns 203 

— Brucket lassie, " Remarks on - - Burns 310 

— Dundee — a song - Burns 206 

— lass of Albany — a song - Burns 205 

— lassie, John Hay's," Remarks on - - Burns 309 

— lassie, will ye go - - - - - Burns 205 

— Peg — song - - Burns 244 

— Peg-a-Ramsay — a song - Burns 272 

— Peggy Alison — a song - Burns 210 

— wee thing, The — a song - - - - Burns 231 
Book of a friend, In the ----- Whi. 71 

— of follies, To the - - - - - Moore 101 

— of sonnets ------ Lon. 364, 380 

— worms, The — an epigram - - - Burns 182 
Books (Prelude) Wor. 527 

— of good and evil P. of F. 94 

Bookseller's announcement - Sch. 265 

Boon of memory ------- Hem. 370 

Borachio, c. in Much Ado about Nothing - Sha. Ill 

Border ballad Scott 428 

Borderers, The — a tragedy - Wor. 43 

Born in a trance, we wake - Pog. 184 

— in the garret, in the kitchen bred - - Byron 223 

Borough, The - Cra. 313 

Borrowed thoughts - Pro. 279 

Borrowed of the night - Sha. 797 

Boston — a sonnet ------ Lon. 383 

— Common — three pictures - Hoi. 151 

— frigate, To the Moore 204 

— pier. For centennial dinner, 1873 - - Hoi. 287 



kq Boileau 

ov Brandon 

Boston tea-party, Ballad of the - - - Hoi. 247 

Both hollow and hill were dumb - - - Mer. 201 

Bothwell castle — a sonnet -..-.-'_ Wor. 388 

— castle - - Scott 458 

Bothwell's pocket-book, In - Scott 406 

Bottle and an honest friend — an epigram Burns 188 

Bottom, a weaver, c. in Mids. Night's Dream Sha. 161 

Boult, a servant, c. in Pericles - Sha. 977 

Boundaries of humanity — an ode - - - Goe. 179 

Bountiful, The - - - - - - P. of F. 93 

Bouquet of primroses. (M. E. Lee.) - - Flo. 67 

Bouquets of floral language - - Flo. 217 

Bourbon, Duke of, c. in Henry v. - - - Sha. 439 

— Duke of, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - - Tay. 232 
Bourchier, Cardinal, c. in Richard hi. - Sha. 556 
Bourdon L'Oise, c. in Fall of Robespierre - Col. 382 
Bourne, Father, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 

— Vincent — the Thracian ----- Cow. 599 

— W. O. Heart's fine gold - Fav. 312 
Bow and arrow bearing ----- gch. 342 

Bow-legs, Sailor's apology for - - - Hood 369 

Bowen, W. Wasted flowers - Flo. 488 

Bowing thyself in dust before a book - - Low. 99 

Bowl of liberty ------- Hem. 309 

Bowles, C. Death of the flowers - - - Flo. 271 

Bowring, Edgar A. Translator's apology - Sen. 11 

Boy and the brook ------ Lon. 337 

— call the gondola ; the sun is set - - - Rog. 51 

— I detest all Persian fopperies - - - Cow. 534 

— I hate their empty shows - Cow. 533 

— of Egremond Rog. 240 

— tell the cook that I hate - - - Moore 337 

— with a watch ------ Moore 69 

Boyd, Hugh Stuart, Sonnets on Bro. 93 

Boyet, a lord, c. in Love's Labor's Lost - Sha. 135 

Boyle, Richard, Epistle to Pope 253 

Boys, The ------- Hoi. 213 

Brabantio, a senator, c. in Othello - - - Sha. 879 

Brackly, Lord, c. in Comus - - - - Mil. 434 

Bradley, Conductor - Whi. 390 

Braes o' Ballochmyle — a song - - . - Burns 197 

— of Kirtle, The Wor. 254 

Brain him with his lady's fan - - - Sha. 389 

Brainard, J. Gr. C. To the sweet-brier - - Flo. 115 

Brakenbury, Sir Robert, c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 556 

Bran, On banks of the Wor. 266 

Branded hand, The Whi. 65 

Brandenburg harvest-song -■■-.-_ Hem. 141 

Brander, c. in Faust ----- jr au> 22 

Brandon, c. in Henry viii. - Sha. 592 



Brave fin 

Brook DU 

Brave men who at the Trocadero fell - - Cam. 175 

— Roland, The ------- Cam. 189 

— rose, alas! where art thou? - - - Her. 237 

— Schill !— a sonnet ----- -Wor. 280 

— singer of the coming time - Hoi. 169 

— sons of Hibernia, your shamrocks - - Flo. 194 

— spirit ! mourned with fond regret - - Hem. 332 
Braving angry winter's storms — a song - Burns 207 
Braw lads of Gala Water — a song - - Burns 214 
Brazil, Freedom in ----- - Whi. 338 

Breach of truce and the first battle - - Iliad 112 

Bread for my mother ------ Wil. 31 

Breadalbane's ruined mansion - - - Wor. 385 

Breadth and depth - - - - - - Sch. 245 

Break, break, break - - - Ten. 118 ; Fav. 405 

Breakfast - - . - - - - - - Mer. 278 

— table series, Epilogue to - Hoi. 205 
Breathe from the gentle south, O Lord - - Cow. 73 
Breathes there a man, with soul so dead - Scott 35. 
Breathings of Spring ------ Hem. 421 

Breeze from shore, The ----- Hem. 363 

— in the church. (Miss Hinxham.) - - Fav. 300 
Bremer, Fredrika, To - Whi. 167 
Brethren, The — an antique -_-.-- Goe. 269 

— what bequest to you should come - - Goe. 383 
Brett, Captain, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 
Brevity is the soul of wit - Sha. 821 
Brewing of soma ------- Whi. 373 

Bric-a-brac Club. " The first fan " - - Hoi. 312 
Brice, David, Letters to Burns 352, 355 

Bridal ballad ------- p e 106 

— birth — a sonnet ______ r os# 227 

— melody. (James T. Fields.) - - - Fav. 54 

— of Pennacook - Whi. 15 

— of Triermain ------ Scott 230 

— o't, the, Remarks on Burns 331 

— song, A- - She. 442 

— song. (Waverley.) - Scott 390 

— of Abydos - Byron 15 

— of Corinth— a ballad ----- G- e. 135 

— of the Danube. (Miss Pickersgill.) - - Flo. 87 

— of the Greek isle ------ Hem. 155 

— The. (Mrs. Sigourney.) - Fav. 79 
Bridegroom, The ------ Q-oe. 73 

Bride's dream ------- p ra 329 

— farewell ----- Hem. 156 ; Fav. 284 

— of Venice -------- R g. 55 

— prelude ------- j> os< 112 

Bridge of cloud - Lon. 318 

— of sighs - - - Hood 119 ; Fav. 139 ; Poe 41 



a 1 Brave 

u± Brook 

Bridge, The - Lon. 85 

Brief as the lightning - - - - - Sha. 162 

— glimpses of the bright celestial - - - Hoi. 190 
Briertz, Scene on the lake of - - - - Wor. 296 
Briggs, Caroline A. Morning - Flo. 370 

When I am old ----- Fav. 55 

Bright be the place of thy soul - - - Byron 228 

— be the skies that cover thee - ■ - Wil. 285 

— be thy dreams ----- Moore 529 

— flag at yonder tapering mast - - - Wil. 82 

— flower ! whose home is everywhere Wor. 416 ; Flo. 16 

— O bright Fedalma. (Spanish Gypsy.) - Eliot 166 

— on the banners of lily and rose - - - Hoi. 306 

— ran thy line, O Galloway - - - Burns 182 

— smiles the lake, as it was - Sch. 341 

— spark, shot from a brighter place - - Her. 159 

— star ! would I were steadfast as thou art - Keats 249 

— wanderer, fair coquette of heaven - - She. 508 

— was the summer's noon ----- Wor. 522 
Brighter day, A (from the Spanish) - - Bry. 320 
Brightness of the eternal glory - Wes. 304 
Brignall banks are wild ----- Scott 199 
Brigs of Ayr, The ----- Burns 96 
Bring, daughter of Toscar, bring the harp - Oss. 261 

— flowers ----- Hem. 338 ; Fav. 121 

— me the captive now ----- Wil. 197 

— me wine, but wine which never - - Erne. Ill 

— out your dead ! The midnight - - - Whi. 90 

— the bowl which you boast - Scott 454 
Bringing our sheaves with us. (E.A.Allen.) Fav. 424 
Britain -------- Tho. 250 

Britannia -------- Tho. 418 

— rediviva ------- Dry. 258 

British church, The ------ Her. 200 

— emancipation, Anniversary of - - - Whi. 55 
Britomartis, Legend of Spe. 197 
Britons ! although our task is but to show - Cam. 179 

— guard your own ------ Ten. 485 

— never shall be slaves ----- Fav. 334 

— Struggle of the — a sonnet - Wor. 356 
Brockley-Coomb, While climbing — a sonnet Col. 96 
Broke the deep slumber in my brain - Dante 11 
Broken are the palace windows - - - Mer. 455 

— dish, The -------- Hood 458 

— in fortune, but in mind entire - - - Wor. 403 

— in pieces all asunder ----- Her. 178 

— music — a sonnet Ros. 250 

— oar, The — a sonnet Lon. 385 

Brooch of Lorn ------ Scott 266 

Brook and road were fellow-travelers - - Wor. 170 



Brook 
Browning 



62 



Brook and the wave, The 

— The - 

— whose society the poet seeks 
Brookfield, Eev. W. H., Sonnet to 
Brooklet, To my ----- 
Brooks, C. T. Christmas-tree 

— for they called you so that knew you 
Broom, Oak and the - - - 

— Poesy of the ----- 
Brose and butter — a song 
Brother and sister - 

— hear and take the curse 

— Jonathan's lament for sister Caroline 

— of Mercy - 
Brothers ! between you and me 



Lon. 



Lon. 

17; Ten. 

-Wor. 

Ten. 

- Lon. 

Flo. 

- Ten. 

- Wor. 

- Flo. 

- Burns 

- Eliot 

- Eliot 

- Hoi. 

- Whi. 

- She. 



and a sermon ------- Ing. 

— The ------ Cra. 198; Wor. 

— whom we may not reach - - - Hoi. 
Brougham castle, Feast at Wor. 
Brown of Ossawatomie ----- Whi. 

— Oliver Madox, Sonnet on - - - - Ros. 

— Richard, Letters to - Burns, 394, 397, 399, 401, 434, 

— rosary, Lay of the - Bro. 

— Samuel, Letter to ----- Burns 

— University, Poem at Wil. 
Browne, Emma Alice. When I am dead - Fav. 

Brownie, The — a sonnet Wor. 

Brownie's cell, The ------ Wor. 



230 
241 
239 
720 
391 
307 
720 
143 
209 
291 

97 
320 
153 
303 
569 
142 

93 
257 
186 
258 
300 
443 
234 
434 
311 
131 
387 
265 



BROWNING, MRS. ELIZABETH BARRETT, Poems of: 



Adequacy — a sonnet 
Adonis, Lament for . 
Amy's Cruelty 
Anacreon, Paraphrase on . 
Apprehension, An — a sonnet 
Apuleius, Paraphrases on . 
August Voice, An . 
Aurora Leigh .... 
Bereavement — a sonnet 
Bertha in the Lane 
Best thing in the world 
Bettine, To (friend of Goethe) 
Bianca among the Nightingales 
Blindness of H. S. Boyd 
Boyd, Hugh S., Sonnets on 
Brown Rosary, Lay of the . 
Calls on the Heart 
Casa Guidi Windows 
Catarina to Camoens . 
Change upon Change 
Cheerfulness taught by reason 
Child Asleep, The . 
Child's Grave at Florence . 
— Thought of God . 
Chorus of Eden spirits 
Christmas Gifts 
Claim, The .... 
Comfort— a sonnet . 
Confessions 



133 
602 
180 

86 
169 
351 
363 

81 
141 
603 
267 
596 

93 

93 
£34 
291 
297 

99 
296 

87 
289 
149 

69 
187 
353 
108 

83 
361 



Consolation— a sonnet . . .81 
Contemplation, Work and . . 86 
Court Lady, A .358 

Cowper, William— his grave . 75 
Crowned and Buried . . .262 

— and Wedded .... 260 
Cry of the Children . . .338 

— of the Human . . . .271 
Curse for a Nation .... 357 
Cyprus, Wine of . . . .101 

Dance, The 348 

Daughters of Pindarus . . 179 

De Profundis 605 

Dead Pan, The .... 104 

Pose A . 294 

Death of Hugh's. Boyd' . ' . * 93 
Deserted Garden .... 50 

Desire, A 88 

Died (The Times' Obituary) . . 613 

Discontent 86 

Drama of Exile — a play . . 182 
Duchess May, Rhyme of the . 276 
Duderant, Madame, Sonnets to 88, 89 
Earth and her Praisers . . 59 
Epilogue to The Seraphim . . 24 
Euripides, Paraphrase on , . 176 
Exaggeration— a sonnet . . 88 
Exile's Picture .... 74 
False Step, A 595 



63 



Brook 
Browning 



Farewell, A 69 

Finite and Infinite— a sonnet . 90 
First News from Villa Franca . 608 
Flower in a Letter .... #65 
Flush, my Dog, To 79 

Flush or Faunus— a sonnet . . 89 
Forced Recruit at Solferino . 614 
Four-fold Aspect ... 180 
Future, Past and .... 82 
Futurity— a sonnet .... 84 
Ganges, Romance of the . . 44 
Garibaldi, Giuseppe . . . 614 
God, Child's Thought of . .69 
Greek Slave, Powers'— a sonnet 91 
Grief— a sonnet . . . .83 
Haydon's Portrait of Wordsworth 82 
Heaven and Earth— a sonnet . 92 
Hector and Andromache . .177 

— in the Garden .... 67 
Heine, Heinrich, Paraphrases 

from 165 

Hemans, Felicia D., to L. E. L. 268 
Hephaestus, a c. in Prom. Bound 115 
Hermes, a c. in Prom. Bound . 115 
Hesiod, Paraphrase on . . 176 
Homer, Paraphrases on . . 177 
House of Clouds .... 98 
Human Life's Misery . . . 293 

Inclusions 294 

Insufficiency . . . . 89, 294 
Io, dtr. of Inachus (Prometheus 

Bound) . . . .115 
Irreparableness— a sonnet . . 82 

Island, An 47 

Isobel's Child 36 

Italy and the World ... 354 

— Summing up in . . . . 611 
King's Gift, The ... 623 
Lady Geraldine's Courtship . . 580 
Lady's 'Yes,' The ... 287 
Lament for Adonis . . .139 
Landon, Letitia E., from Mrs. He- 
mans 268 

— her last Question ... 287 
Lay of the Brown Rosary . . 234 

— of the Early Rose . . .273 
Legacies— H. S. Boyd . . 93 
Lessons from the Gorse . .108 
Life— a sonnet .... 91 

— and Love 144 

Life's Progress, Rhapsody of . 95 
Little Friend, The . . . .290 

— Mattie "593 

Look, Meaning of the— a sonnet . 85 

— The— a sonnet .... 85 
Lord Waiter's Wife . . .591 
Lost Bower, The .... 223 
Love— a sonnet . . . .92 

Loved Once 95 

Man and Nature . . . .70 
Man's Requirements, A . .114 
Margret, Romaunt of . . .33 

Mask, The 110 

May's Love 594 

Meaning of the Look— a sonnet 85 

Measure, The 7? 

Memory and Hope ... 65 
Mitford, Mary Russell, To . . 73 
Mother and Poet . . . .619 
Mountaineer and Poet— a sonnet 91 
Mourning Mother, The . . 290 



Music, Perplexed— a sonnet . 

Musical Instrument . 

My Doves 

— Heart and I 

— Kate 

Napoleon HI, in Italy 

Nature, Man and .... 

Nature's Remorses 

Night and the Merry Man 

Nightingales, Bianca among the 

Nonnus, Paraphrases on 

North and South 

Oceanus, a c. in Prom. Bound 

Only a Curl 

Pain in Pleasure .... 
Pandarus, Daughter of 
Paraphrase on Anacreon 

— on Euripides .... 

— on Hesiod 

— on Theocritus .... 
Paraphrases on Apuleius 

— on Heinrich Heine . 

— on Homer 

— on Nonnus .... 
Parting Lovers (Sienna) . 
Past and Future .... 
Perplexed Music .... 
Pet-name, The .... 
Plays: Drama of Exile . 

— Prometheus Bound . 

Poet and the Bird .... 

Poets, Vision of . 

Poet's Vow, The .... 

Portrait, A 

Portuguese Sonnets— Translations 
Powers' Greek Slave 
Prisoner, The— a sonnet 
Prometheus Bound— a play . 
Prospect, The— a sonnet . 
Psyche propitiating Ceres 
Ragged Schools of London 
Recognition, A— a sonnet 

Reed, A 

Rhapsody of Life's Progress 
Rhyme of the Duchess May 
Roman Campagna, View across . 
Romance of the Ganges . 

— of the Swan's Nest 
Romaunt of Margret . 

— of the Page 

Rosalind's Scroll, Words of 
Rose, Song of the .... 
Runaway Slave, The . 
Sabbath Morning at Sea 

Sand, George, To ... 88 
Sea-mew, The 

— side Walk 

Seraph and Poet .... 
Seraphim, The .... 

Sleep, The 

Sleeping and Watching 
Solferino, Forced recruit at . 
Song against Singing . 

— for Ragged Schools of London 

— of the Rose 

Sonnets: Adequacy . 

— Apprehension, An 

— Bereavement .... 

— Boyd, HughS., On . 

— Comfort 

— Consolation .... 



84 
607 

72 
269 
599 
342 

70 
621 

57 
596 
173 
624 
115 
615 

86 
179 
180 
176 
176 
166 
169 
165 
177 
173 
618 

82 

84 

78 
182 
115 
2^.8 
244 

25 

C6 
152 

91 

89 
115 

92 
171 
600 

88 
297 

95 
276 
617 

45 
113 

33 
229 

31 
180 
145 
109 
,89 

72 

71 

81 
9 

70 
107 
614 

74 
600 
180 



Browning 
Bryant 



64 



Sonnets : Contemplation and Work 

— Discontent . 

— Dudevant, Madame, To 

— Exaggeration 

— Finite and Infinite . 

— Flush or Faunus . 

— Futurity . 

— Grief . 

— Heaven and Earth . 

— Insufficiency 

— Irreparableness 

— Life . 

— Look, The 

— Love 

— Meaning of the Look 

— Mountaineer and Poet 

— Pain in Pleasure 

— Past and Future 

— Perplexed Music 

— Poet. The . 

— Powers' Greek Slave 

— Prisoner, The 

— Prospect, The . 

— Sand, George 

— Seraph and Poet 

— Soul's Expression 

— Substitution 

— Tears . 

— Thought for a Death-bed 

— Translations from Portuguese 

— Two Sayings, The 

— Two Sketches .... 

— Wordsworth, On portrait of 

— Work .... 
Soul's Expression— a sonnet 

— Traveling .... 
Sounds 



SO 

152 

85 

90 

. 82 

84,86 

. 81 

52 

. 55 



Spirits of the Trees . . .187 

Stanzas Ill 

Substitution — a sonnet . . 83 
Summing up in Italy . . .611 
Swallow. Ode to the ... 180 
Sword of • Castruccio Castrucani 610 
Tale of Villa Franca . . .350 
Tears— a sonnet .... 83 

That Day 144 

Theocritus, Paraphrase on . 166 
Thought for a Death-bed . . 86 
Translations of Portuguese Son- 
nets 152 

Trees, Spirits of the . . .187 
Two Savings, The— a sonnet . 85 

— Sketches 90 

Valediction, A 69 

Victor Emanuel, entering Florence 609 
Victoria's Tears . . . .112 
View across the Roman Cam- 

pagna 617 

Villa Franca, First News from 608 

Tale of .... 350 

Virgin Marv to Jesus . . .62 
Vision of Poets, A ... 245 

Void in Law 595 

Weakest Thing, The ... 77 
Where's Agnes? .... 603 
Wine of Cyprus . . . .101 
Wisdom Unapplied . . . 270 
Woman's Shortcomings, A . 295 
Wordsworth. William, Sonnet on 

portrait of . . .82 

Work— a sonnet .... 84 

— and Contemplation . . .86 
Year's Spinning, A . . . 296 



Young Queen 

Browning, Mrs. E. B. Dead rose, A Flo. 

Hector in the garden - Flo. 

Lessons from the gorse - Flo. 

Only a curl ------ Fav. 

Browning, Robert. Evelyn Hope - - - Fav. 

Bruar Water, Humble petition of - - Burns 

Bruce, Michael. Elegy written in spring - Fav. 

Bruce's address to his army - Burns 
Bruce, Heart of the ------ Ayt. 

Bruges— a sonnet ------ Wbr. 

Brunanburh, Battle of - - * - - - Ten. 

Brussels, Peace convention at Whi. 

Brutus is an honorable man - Sha. 

— Junius, a tribune, c. in Coriolanus - - Sha. 

— Marcus, a conspirator, c. in Julius Csesar - Sha. 

— Tragedy of, Choruses to - Pope 
BRYANT, WILLIAM C, Poems of: 

Apennines, To the 
Apple-tree, Planting of the . 
Arctic Lover. The 
Arve River. To the . 
Autumn. Voice of 

— Woods 

Battle-field, The . 

Blessed are they that mourn 

Brighter Day, A . 



African Chief. The 
After a Tempest . 
Ages. The 
Agricultural Celebration, 

for . 
Alcayde of Molina, The 
Aliator, Death of . 
Among the Trees 
Antiquity of Freedom . 


. 101 
66 
. 11 
Ode 

. 46 

. 145 

. 146 

. 321 

. 198 



. Ill 
281 
442 
512 
399 
376 
108 
315 
257 
46 
292 
722 
149 
777 
654 
764 
355 

159 

. 222 
185 

. 126 
219 

. 68 
181 

. 35 



65 



Browning 
Bryant 



Bryant, William C, Sketch of, by 

R. H. Stoddard . 1 

Burial of Love .... 217 

— place, The 34 

Castle Windeck, Lady of . . 157 
Castro, Pedro de, From Spanish 

of 150 

Catterskill Falls .... 169 
Child's Funeral, The . . .180 
Chivalry, Love in Age of . . 148 
Christmas in 1875 . . . . 343 
Cloud on the Way . . .250 

— To a 72 

Cole, Thomas, Sonnet to . . 127 
Conjunction of Jupiter and Venus 111 
Conqueror's Grave. The . . 220 
Constellations, The . . .265 
Consumption— a sonnet . . 54 
Count of Greiers, The . . 152 

Crowded Streets, The . . .206 
Damsel of Peru, The . . .100 
Dante—' ' who mid the grasses ' ' 315 
Day-dream, A 255 

Death of Aliator . . . .146 

— of Lincoln .... 316 

— of Schiller 184 

— of Slavery .... 317 

— of the Flowers . . . .92 
December Twenty-second . . 129 
Delawares, Legend of the . . 332 
Disinterred Warrior, The . . 106 
Dost thou idly ask? . . . .61 

Dream, A 197 

Earth 160 

"Earth's children cleave to 

Earth" 176 

Evening Reverie, An . . . 194 

— Wind, The 124 

Fatima and Radma . . .142 
Firmament, The . . . .86 
Flood of Years, The ... 344 
Flowers, Death of the . . . 92 
Forest Hymn, A . . . . 7'9 

Fountain, The 185 

Fringed Gentian, To the . . 128 

Future, The 183 

Gladness of Nature, The . . 105 
Greek Amazon, Song of . . 71 

— Boy, The 120 

— Partisan, The . . . .108 
Green Mountain Boys . . 178 

— River 27 

Greiers, Count of 152 

He hath put all things under his 

feet 312 

Homer's Odyssey, Fifth Book of, 

translated .... 282 
Hunter of the Prairies . . 165 
Hunter's Serenade, The . . 118 

— Vision, The .... 176 
Hurricane. The . . . .116 
Hymn of the City . . .129 

— of the Sea 203 

— of the Waldenses ... 62 

— to Death 39 

— to North Sea .... 74 
I broke the spell that held me 

long 83 

— cannot forget with what fervid 

devotion .... 88 
Iglesias, From Spanish of . .151 



Indian at Burial-place of his 

Fathers 58 

— Girl's Lament .... 44 

— Story, An 54 

Innocent Child and Snow-white 

flower! 126 

Inscription for entrance to a wood 24 
Invitation to the Country . . 232 
It is a fearful night — a sonnet 
Italica, Ruins of . • . 

Italy 

Journey of Life, The . 

June 

Jupiter and Venus, Conjunction 

of 

Knight's Epitaph, The . 
Lady of Castle Windeck, The 
Land of Dreams, The . 
Lapse of Time, The . 
Legend of the Delawares 
Leggett, William, In memory of 
Life 

— of the Blessed . 

— that is, The .... 

— time, A 
Lincoln, Abraham, Death of 

— Robert of . 

Little People of the Snow , 
Living Lost, The . 
Lost Bird, The 
Love and Folly . 

— in the Age of Chivalry 
Love of God, The 
Maiden's Sorrow, The . 
March 

— the Twenty -seventh . 
Marion's Men, Song of 
Mary Magdalen 
Massacre at Scio, The 
May Evening .... 

— sun sheds an amber light 
Meditation on Rhode Island Coal 95 
Midsummer— a sonnet . . 107 
Molina, Alcayde of 145 
Monument Mountain ... 63 
Mosquito, To a . . . .89 
Mother's Hymn, The . . .267 
Murdered Traveler, The . .73 
Mutation— a sonnet ... 70 
My Autumn Walk . . . .313 
New and the Old, The . . 249 

— Moon, The 98 

— Year's Eve, Song for . . 234 
Night Journey of a River . . 237 
No man knoweth his sepulcher 36 

Noon 205 

North Star, Hymn to . . . 74 
Northern Legend, A . . .155 

Not Yet 262 

November— a sonnet . . .70 

— the Third, 1861 
O Fairest of the Rural Maids 

— mother of a mighty race 
October 

— 1866 

Ode for Agricultural Celebration 
Old Man's Counsel, The . 

Funeral, The . 

Order of Nature . 
Our Country's Call . 

— Fellow- worshipers . 



Bryant 
Burn 



66 



Painted Cup, The . . . . 196 
Paradise of Tears, The . . 156 

Past, The 121 

Path, The 

Peru, Damsel of 
Pitcairn's Island, Song of . 
Planting of the Apple-tree, The 

Poet, The 

Prairies, The ...» 
Presentiment, A . 
Rain-dream, The . 
Receive thy sight 
Return of the Birds 

— of Youth 

Revisiting the Country . 

Rhode Island Coal, Meditation on 



100 

85 

222 

306 

130 

179 

226 

319 

310 

201 

91 

95 



Rivulet, The 

Rizpah 47 

Robert of Lincoln . . . .229 

Romero 93 

Ruins of Italica . . . .257 
Scene on the Banks of the Hudson 115 
Schiller, John C. F., Death of . 184 

Sella 268 

Semedo, From Portuguese of— a 

sonnet 151 

Serenade, The (from the Spanish) 153 

Seventy-six 166 

Sick-bed, A 242 

Siesta, The (from the Spanish) 
Simonides, Fragment of 
Slavery, Death of 
Snow-shower, The . 
Song for New Year's Eve . 

— of Marion's Men . 

— of Pitcairn's Island 

— of the Greek Amazon 

— of the Sower, The . 

— of the Stars, The 
Sonnets : Cole, Thomas, To 

— Consumption 

Bryant, William C 



Death of the flowers 

Forest hymn - 

Fringed gentian, To the - 

How to live - 

June ----- 

March ----- 

November - 

October — a sonnet - 

— — On his birthday 

Return of youth - 

Sketch of, by R H. Stoddard 

Song of the stars 



Sonnets: Midsummer. 

— Mutation 

— November 

— Semedo, Portuguese of 

— Tell, William . 
Spring in Town 
Stars, Song of the 
Stay, rivulet, nor haste to leave 
Stoddard, R. H. Sketch of W 

Bryant 
Strange Lady, The . 
Stream of Life, The . 
Summer Ramble, A 

— Wind 

Tell, William — a sonnet 
Thanatopsis .... 
These prairies glow with flowers 
Third of November, 1861 . 
Tides, The 

Tree-burial .... 
Twenty-second of December 

— seventh of March . 
Two Graves, The . 

— Travelers, The 
Unknown Way, The 
Upon the mountain's distant 

head .... 
Villegas, From Spanish of . 
Voice of Autumn, The 
Waiting by the Gate 
Waldenses, Hymn of the . 
Walk at Sunset, A . 
Waning Moon, The . 
Waterfowl, To a 
West Wind, The . 
When the firmament quivers 
White-footed Deer, The . 
Wind and Stream, The . 
Winds, The .... 
Winter Piece, The . 
Yellow Violet, The . 

Child and lily - 



144 
138 
317 
225 
234 
134 

85 

71 
244 

77 
127 

54 



C. 



107 

70 

70 

^.51 

118 

103 

77 

150 

1 
172 

212 

113 
57 

118 
21 

241 

266 
. 252 

330 
. 129 

231 
. 109 

341 
. 212 

122 
. 139 

219 

. 260 

62 

. 37 

210 



125 



235 

188 



- Fav. 125 



Flo. 
Fav. 
Fav. 
Flo. 
Fav. 
Fav. 
Flo. 
; Flo. 
Flo. 
Whi. 
Fav. 
Bry. 
Fav. 
Yellow violet Flo. 

Bryant's seventieth birthday - - - Hoi. 
Buccleuch, duke of, Letter of - - - - Scott 
Buchan, earl of, Letters to - Burns 368, 470, 

Flo. 
Spe. 
Sha. 
Sha. 



Buchanan, R Pansies - 
Buckhurst, lord of, Sonnet to - 
Buckingham, Duke of, c. in Henry vi. 
— Duke of, c. in Eichard iii. 



pt. 2 



73 

188 

38 

274 

245 

158 

410 

270 

501 

323 

408 

1 

369 

44 

259 

414 

494 

80 

27 

496 

556 



ah Eryant 

D ' Burn 

Buckingham, Duke of, c. in Henry viii. - Sha. 592 

— duke of, In reply to ----- Pope 375 
Bud bit with an envious worm - - - Sha. 713 

— of love by summer's ripening - - - Sha. 720 
Buddha, Eemarks about - - Arn. 179 
Buds of rose, virgin flowers - - Moore 45 ; Flo. 104 
Buena Vista, Angels of ... - Whi. 119 
Build at Kallundborg by the sea - - - Whi. 307 

— me straight, O worthy master - - - Lon. 122 
Builders, The ------- Lon. 130 

Building of the long serpent - - - - Lon. 256 

— of the ship ------- Lon. 122 

— on the sand. (Eliza Cook.) - - - Fa v. 234 
Bulkeley, Hunt, Willard, Hosmer - - - Erne. 35 
Bulkley , Mrs. , Epilogue intended for - - Gol. 147 

Epilogues spoken by - - Gol. 144, 267, 364 

Bull, Eev. Wm., To ----- Cow. 407 

Bull-calf, a recruit, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - Sha. 409 

— Eun, Picket before. (J.W.Day.) - - Fav. 229 
Bullen, Anne. See Boleyn. 

Bully, c. in Faust - Fau. 170 

Bunch of grapes - - - - - ' - Her. 217 

Bunker Hill battle, Story of - Hoi. 300 

Buona notte (Good-night) - She. 577 

Buonarotti (" Michelangelo") — a play - - Lon. 415 

Burden of Nineveh ------ Eos. 21 

Burdett, Sir Francis, To - Cam. 264 

Burghers, The. (Her. and Dorothea, III.) - Goe. 306 

Burgundy, Duke of, c. in Henry v. - - - Sha. 439 

— Duke of, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 

— Duke of, c. in King Lear ... - Sha. 847 

— Duke of, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - Tay. 232 
Burial --------- Goe. 239 

— march of Dundee Ayt. 71 

— of Barbour Whi. 211 

— of champion of his class - Wil. 114 

— of love ----- - Bry. 217; Ten. 465 

— of Sir John Moore. (Charles Wolfe.) - Fav. 35 

— of the Minnisink - Lon. 10 

— of the poet ------- Lon. 401 

— place in Scotland — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 383 

— place, The Bry. 34 

Burials. (The Parish Eegister.) - - - Cra. 292 

Buried flowers, The Ayt. 179 

Burke, Edmund, Sonnet to Col. 93 

Burleigh, Lord of ----- Ten. 113 

— lord, Sonnet to ------ Spe. 25 

Burlington, Countess of Pope 387 

Burly dozing humble bee Erne. 39 

Burn, evening hearth, and waken - - Lon. 318 



Burnes 
Burns 



68 



Burnes, William, Epitaph on Burns 176 

Burness, James, Letters to - Burns 344, 348, 357, 428, 512 

— William (his father), Letter to - - - Burns 342 
Burning of the love-letter ----- Hood 588 
Burns centenary, For the, 1859 - - - Hoi. 150 
For the - - - - - - - Whi. 247 

— club, For meeting of - - - - - Hoi. 137 
Burns, Gilbert, Letters to - - - Burns 383, 449, 511 

— Miss, Under picture of Burns 178 
BURNS, ROBERT, Poems of : 



Aberfeldy, Birk of— a song . 
Absence, Remarks on 

Adam A 's Prayer . 

Address of Beelzebub 

— spoken by Miss Fontenelle on 

benefit night 

— to Edinburgh .... 

— to the Deil .... 

— to the Shade of Thomson . 

— to the Toothache . 

— to the Unco Guid 

— to the Woodlark— a song 
Adown Winding Nith— a song 
Afton Water— a song . 

Ah, Chloris— a song 

— the poor Shepherd's mournful 

fate," Remarks on 
Aiken. Andrew, Epistle to 

— Robert .... 351, 

— Robert. Epitaph on 
Ainslie, Miss, Epigram to 

— Robert, Letters to, 378, 380, 381, 

401. 407, 403. 423, 436, 442, 471, 
Albany, Bonny Lass of— a song 
Alexander, Miss, Letter to . 
Alison, Rev. Archibald. Letter to 
" Allan Water." Remarks on 
Amang the Trees where Humming 
Bees— a song .... 
American War. The— a fragment 
Anderson, Dr., Letter to 
Anecdotes and Remarks of Songs 
Anna thy charms— a song . 
Answer to a Poetical Epistle . 
Armour, James, Letter to 
Armstrong, Agnes, Song to. (Ros- 
lin Castle.) .... 
4i As I cam down by yon Castle 
way Remarks on . . . 
As I was a Wandering— a song 
Auld Farmer's New-Year Morn- 
ing Salutation 

— Lang Syne— a song 

— Lang Syne, Remarks on . 

— Man, The 

— Rob Morris," . . .243, 

— Robin Gray," Remarks on . 
Austrians, On Defeat of, at Ge- 

mappe 

Author's Cry and Prayer 
Ayr, Bonny Banks of— a song. 

— Brigs of 

Bacon, an innkeeper, Epigram 

on 

Baird, Rev. G., Letter to 
Ballads, Heron Election— a song 



272 
203 
459 
293 
261 
67 
514 

295 

337 
346 

71 

213 
334 
548 
325 



Ballantyne, John, Letters to, 352, 361 
363, 364, 367 
Ballochmyle. Lass of— a song . 202 
Bank-note, Written on a . . 93 
Banks of Cree, The— a song . . 262 
— of Doon, The— a song . 203, 240 



310 
225 

207 
294 

257 

273 

90 



— of Forth," Remarks on 

— of Nith, The— a song . 

— of the Devon, The — a song . 

— of the Tweed," Remarks on . 
Bannockburn, Bruce's address 

at 

Bannocks o' Barley— a song 

Bard's Epitaph, A 

Battle of KilliecranMe, The— a 

song 228 

— of Sheriff -Muir, The— a song . 223 

Bed. To my 127 

Beds of Sweet Roses," Remarks 

on 295 

Beelzebub. Address of . . .83 
Begbie, Miss Eliza, Letters to, 345, 347 
Behold the Hour— a song . . 232 
BeUes of Mauchline, The . . 37 
Bengo, Mr., Letter to . . .415 
Benson, Miss, Letter to . . .487 
Bess and her Spinning-wheel— a 

song 238 

— the Gawkie," Remarks on . 294 
Beware of Bonny Ann— a song . 223 
Bide ye yet, Remarks on . . 314 
Birks of Aberfeldy, The— a song . 204 
Birth of a Posthumous Child . 134 
Black Eagle, The." Remarks on . 

— headed Eagle, The 
Blacklock, Dr., Epistle to 

— Dr., Letter to . 

— Dr., Remarks on his songs 
Blair, Hugh, Letter to 

— James Hunter, On Death of . 
Blaithrie o't, Remarks on . 
Blink o'er the Burn," Remarks on 309 
Blithe hae I been— a song . . 253 

— was she— a song .... 206 
Blithesome Bridal. Remarks on 309 
Blooming Nelly— a song . . 224 
Blue-eyed Lassie, The — a song . 221 
Bob o' Dunblane." Remarks on .339 
Bonny Banks of Ayr, The— a song 203 

— Brucket Lassie," Remarks on . 310 

— Dundee— a song . . . 206 

— Lass of Albany— a song . . 205 

— Lassie, John Hay's, Remarks on 309 

— Leslie — a song . . . .231 

— Peg— a song .... 244 

— Peg-a-Ramsay— a song . . 272 



181 
171 

422 



374 

107 



69 



iurnes 
Burns 



Bonny Peggy Alison— a song . 210 

— Wee Thing, The— a song . . 231 
Book-worms, The — an epigram l&i 
Bottle and an honest friend— an 

epigram . . . .188 
Braes o' Ballochmyle, The— a song 197 
Braving Angry Winter's Storms 

—a song 207 

Braw lads of Gala Water — a song 214 
Brice, David, Letter to . . 352, 355 
Bridal o't. The," Remarks on . 331 
Brigs of Ayr, The . . . .96 
Brose and Butter— a song . .291 
Brown, Richard, Letters to, 394,397 
399, 401, 403, 434, 443 
Brown, Samuel, Letter to . . 434 
Bruar Water, Humble Petition of 108 
Bruce 's Address to his Army at 

Bannockburn— a song . 257 
Buchan, Earl of, Letters to, 368, 470, 494 
Burnes, William, Epitaph on (fa- 
ther of Robert) . . . 176 
Burness, James, Letters to, 344, 348 
349, 357, 428, 512, 513 

— William (his father), Letter to 342 
Burns, Gilbert, Letters to, 383, 449, 511 

— Robert, Letters of. See Letters. 
Burns Robert, Letters to George 

Thomson .... 514 

— Robert, Memoir of . . . 5 

— Miss, Under a picture of . . 178 

— Mrs. Robert, Letters to 512, 513 

— William, Letter to . 432 
Burton, Mr., Epitaph for . . 180 
Bush Aboon Traquair," Remarks 

on 311 

Bushby, John, Epitaph on . . 187 
Bushby's, John, Lamentation— a 

song 281 

By Allan stream I chanced to 

rove— a song .... 255 

C , Mrs., To . . . .103 

Ca' the Ewes— a song . . 229, 263 
Caledonia— a song. "There was 

once" 271 

— " There groves of sweet myrtle 

—a song 284 

Calf, The 93 

Campbell, Hay, Epigram on . 177 

— Mary, To, in Heaven— a song 219 
Candlish, James, Letters to 369, 377 
Canst thou leave me thus— a song 268 

Captain , Letter to . . . 493 

Captain's Lady, The— a song . 227 
Captive Ribband, The," Remarks 

on 331 

Card in o't, The— a song . . 269 
Carfrae, Rev. P., Letter to °. 430 
Carle of Kellyburn Braes, The— 

a song .... 245 

Carles of Dysart, The— a song . 278 
Carron Inn, Epigram at . . 178 
Cassillis' Banks— a song . . 273 
Castle Gordon .... 109 
Cauld Kail in Aberdeen," Re- 
marks on . . . . 320 
Cease, cease, my dear friend," 

Remarks on 330 

Cessnock Banks, On— a song . 190 
Chalmers, Margaret, Letters to 
384, 388, 391, 395, 398, 403, 404, 416 



Chalmers, William, Letter to . 362 
Chevalier's Lament, A— a song . 210 
Chloris being ill, On— a song . 283 

— Fragment of a song . . . 284 

— Songs to . . . . . 264 
Clarinda, To ... . 112, 113 

— (Craig), Letters to . . . 562 
Clarke, Mr., Letter to . 510 

— J., Letter to . . . .478 

— Samuel, Jr., Letter to . . 501 
Cleghorn, Robert, Letters to 361, 403 
"Clout the Caldron," Remarks 

on 296 

Cock up your Beaver — a song . 243 
Collier's Bonny Lassie, Remarks 

on 307 

Come boat me o'er to Charlie— a 

song 217 

— let me take thee— a song . . 256 

— Rede me, Dame— a song . 227 
Coming through the Braes— a 

song . 276 

— through the Rye— a song . . 278 
Commonplace Book begun April, 

1783 579 

Constable, Lady W. M., Letters 

to 445, 461 

Contented wi' Little— a song . 268 
Cooper of Cuddie, The— a song . 275 
Corn-rigs are bonny," Remarks 

on 314 

Correspondence. See Letters. 
Cotter's Saturday Night, The . 50 
Countrie Lassie— a song . . 239 
Country Laird, Epitaph on a . 185 

— Squire, Epigrams on a hen- 

pecked 186 

Coxcomb, Epitaph on a . 186 

Craig, Clarinda, Letters to . . 562 
Craigie-burn Wood— a song . 235 
Craik, Miss, Letter to . 490 

Cree, Banks of— a song . . 262 
Creech, William, Epistle to . . 167 

— William, Letters to . 375, 435 
Creed of Poverty, Then— an epi- 
gram 183 

Cromlet's Lilt, Remarks on . .311 
Cruikshank, Miss, To . . . 110 

— W., Epitaph on . . . .187 

— W., Letters to . . 378, 400, 412 
Cunningham, Alexander. Letters 

to 433, 4E3, 458, 403, 467, 469, 479 
486, 497, 511 

— Lady E., Letter to . ... 471 
Cure for all Care, The— a song . 195 
Daer, Lord, On meeting with . 100 
Dainty Davie— a song . . . 256 

Remarks on 338 

Dalrymple, James, 1787, Letter to 389 
Dalzel, Alexander, Letter to . 467 
Damon and Sylvia— a song . . 291 
Daughter, Epitaph on his . . 184 
Daunt on me, To— a song . . 216 
Davie, Epistles to . . 150, 160 
Davies, Miss, Letters to . 423, 472 
Day Returns, The— a song . 212 

Dean of Faculty, The— a song . 286 
Death and Dr. Hornbook . . 39 

— of favorite child, On . . . 140 

— of Poor Mailie, The . . 35 
Dedication to Gavin Hamilton . 90 



Burns 



VO 



Deil's Awa' wl' the Excisemen— a 

song 234 

Delia — an ode .... 118 
Deluded Swain, the pleasure— a 

song 258 

Denk's Dang o'er my Daddie — a 

song 244 

De Peyster, Colonel, To . . 148 
Despondency — an ode . . 82 
Devon, Banks of the— a song . 207 
Discreet Hint, The— a song . 213 
Donald and Flora," Remarks on . 331 
Doon, Banks of— a song . . 203 
Dove, John, Epitaph on . . 176 
Down the Bum, Davie,' ' Remarks 

on 308 

Dream, A 84 

Drumlanrig, Destruction of the 

woods near . . .146 
Dumbarton Drums," Remarks on 319 
Dumfries Volunteers, The — a song 282 
Dumourier, General, Welcome to 

— a song 252 

Dunbar, Wm., Letters to, 369, 404, 449 
461, 505 
Duncan Gray— a song . . 243. 319 
Dundas, Robert, On Death of . Ill 
Dunlop, Mrs., Sketch to . . 123 

— Mrs., Letters to. See Letters 342 
Earl's Picture. For an . . . 103 
"Echo," the lap-dog, On . . 181 
Edinburgh, Address to . . . 101 
Editor of "Morning Chronicle," 

Letter to . . . .504 

— of the " Star," Letter to . 420 
Eglinton, Earl of, Letter to . . 363 
Egotisms from my own sensations 582 
Elegy, The, " Lament in rhyme " 36 

— on Captain Matthew Henderson 128 

— on Death of Sir J. H. Blair ■ . 107 

— on Death of Robert Dundas . Ill 

— on Death of Robt. Ruisseaux . 38 

— on Miss Burnet of Monboddo 134 

— on Peg Nicholson . . . 127 

— on the year 1788 . . .115 

Eliza— a song 200 

Elphinstone's translations of Mar- • 

tial, On 179 

Epigrams, Epitaphs, etc. . . 176 
Epistles: Aiken, Andrew, To (A 

young friend) . . . 164 

— Blacklock, Dr., To . . . 171 

— Creech, William, To . . 167 

— Davie, To, a brother poet 150, 160 

— Esopus to Maria . . .141 

— Goudie, John, To 155 

— Graham, Robert, To 169, 172, 174, 175 

— Guidwife of Wauchope House, 

To 166 

— Hamilton, Gavin, To . . 163 

— Kennedy. John, Invitation to 163 

— Lapraik, John . 152, 153, 158 

— Logan, Major, To 165 

— MAdam, Mr., of Craigengillan, 

To 165 

— MMath, John, To . 159 

— Parker, Hugh, To . 168 

— Rankine, John, To . . . 149 

— Scott, Mrs., of Wauchope, To . 166 

— Simpson. Wm., of Ochiltree, To 155 

— Smith, James, To 161 



Epistle: Tait, James, of Glencow- 

er, To 170 

Epitaphs: Aiken, Robert, On . 185 

— Bard's epitaph ... 90 

— Burnes, William (father of Rob- 

ert) 176 

— Burton, Mr., For . . .180 

— Bushby, John. On . . . 187 

— Country Laird, On a . . . 185 

— Coxcomb, On a noted . . 186 

— Cruikshank, W., On . . . 187 

— Daughter, On a . . . 184 

— Dove, John, of Mauchline . 176 

— "Echo," the lap-dog, On . 181 

— Epitaph, The .... 130 

— Friend, On a . . . . 185 

— Grizzel Grim, On . . .180 

— Hamilton. Gavin, On . . 185 

— Holy Willie, On . . . .44 

— Hood, a ruling elder, On . 185 

— Humphrey, James, On . l«(j 

— Marquis, On a person nick- 

named the . . . .179 

— Noisy polemic, On a . . 186 

— Richardson, Gabriel, On . . 181 

— Riddel, Mrs., of Woodley Park, 

On 182 

— Schoolmaster, On a . . 179 

— Suicide, On a . . .183 

— Tarn Samson's weel worn clay 

lies here 96 

— Tarn the Chapman, On . .185 

— W , On 179 

— Wag in Mauchline (James 

Smith) 177 

— Wat, On . . . . .187 

— Wee Johnny, On 185 
Eppie Adair— a song . . . 227 
Erskine, Harry, Epigram on . 177 

— John E rancis, Letter to . 487 
Esopus to Maria— an epistle . . 141 
Ewie wi' the Crooked Horn, The 334 
Excellent new song . . . 288 
Excise, On being appointed to the 179 
Excisemen, Epigram on . . 183 
Extempore on Two Lawyers . 177 

— on William Smellie . . .178 

— pinned to a lady's coach . 183 

— to Mr. Syme . . . .184 
Fair Eliza— a song . . .239 

— Jenny— a song . . . .257 
Fairest Maid of Devon Banks . 289 

— of the Fair, Remarks on . . 302 
Fall of Fyers, At the . . . 109 
Farewell, A 177 

— The 92, 272 

— thou stream— a song . . .267 

— to a' our Scottish Fame . 249 

— to Brethren of St. James' 

Lodge— a song . . .201 
Fergusson, Robert, Epigram un- 
der portrait of . . . 177 

— — Letter on his headstone . 370 

On 139 

Ferrier, Miss, To . . . .107 
Fete Champetre, The— a song . 211 
Fife, and a' the Lands, Remarks 

on 317 

Findlater, Alexander, Letter to . 504 
First Psalm. The .... 38 
Five Carlines, The— a song . . 220 



71 



Bun 



Flowers of Edinburgh," Remarks 

on 297 

Fond Kiss, Ae— a song . . 232 
Fontenelle, Miss, Address spoken 

by 139 

Letter to 502 

On seeing her act . . 181 

Spoken by, on her benefit 

night 147 

For lack of Gold," Eemarks on . 320 

— the Sake of Somebody — a song 260 
Forlorn, niy love, no comfort 

near— a song . . . 283 
Fox, Charles James, Inscribed to 117 
Frae the Friends and Land I 

love — a song . . . 235 

Fragment of a song . . .19(5 

— of a song— Chloris . . . 284 
Friars' Carse Hermitage, In . 113 
Friend, Epitaph on a . . .185 
Friendship, Happy — a song . 244 
Fullarton, Colonel, Letter to . 471 
Fye, gae rub her o'er wi' strae, 

Remarks on . . . . 298 
Gaberlunzie Man, The, Remarks 

on 328 

Gala Water— a song ... 250 
Gallant Weaver, The— a song . 241 
Galloway, Lord, Epigrams on . 182 

— Tarn," Remarks on . . . 336 
Geddes, Bishop Alexander, Letter 

to 428 

Gemappe, Epigram on Defeat at 181 
Gentle Swain, The, Remarks on 302 
Gentleman, Epigram to an of- 
fended 181 

Gil Morice, Remarks on . . 326 
Glencairn, Earl of, Lament for . 135 
Letters to . . 367, 390, 498 

— Lady, Letter to . . .491 
Globe Tavern, Epigrams on din- 
ing at 181 

on a window at . . . 183 

Gloomy December— a song . . 232 
Goblet, Inscription on a . . 184 
Goudie, John, Epistle to . . 155 
Gowden Locks of Anna, The — a 

song 270 

Grace after dinner . . . 188 

— before dinner . . . .187 
Gracie, James, Letter to . . 513 
Graham, Robert, Epistles to, 109, 172 

174, 175 

Letters to . . 412, 443, 484 

Mrs., Letter to ... 462 

— Mrs., Of Fintry, To . . .144 
Gramachree, Remarks on . . 307 
Green grow the Rushes, O!— a 

song 195 

Gregory, Lord —a song . . . 250 
Grizzel Grim, Epitaph on . . 180 
Grose, Captain, the Antiquary . 122 

— Francis, Epitaph for . . 180 

— — Letters to .... 476 
Guid e'en to you, Kimmer— a song 277 
Guidwife, count the Lawin— a 

song 228 

Had I a Cave— a song . . . 255 

— I the Wyte— a song . . 271 

Haggis, To a 103 

Halloween 45 



Hamilton, Gawin, Dedication to 90 

Epistle to .... 163 

Epitaph on . . .185 

Letters to, 360, 362, 368, 382, 395 

— James, Letter to . . . 435 
Happy Friendship— a song . 244 

— Marriage, The," Remarks on . 300 
Hay, Charles, Letter to . . 391 

— Mrs. Lewis, Letters to. See 

Chalmers, Miss. 
He Stole my Tender Heart away," 

Remarks on 302 

Hee Balou ! — a song • . . . 272 
Henderson, Matthew, Elegy on 128 
Henpecked Country Squire, Epi- 
grams on . . . . , 186 

— Husband, The . . . .186 
Her Daddie Forbad— a song . 215 

— flowing Locks— a song . . 274 
Here's a health to my true love," 

Remarks on . . . .321 

— a health to them that's awa'-a 

song 249 

— his health in water— a song . 2<3 

— to thy health, my bonny lass— 

a song 261 

Hermit, The 105 

Heron, Mr., Letter to . . .505 

— Election Ballads, The— a song . £79 
Hey for a Lass wi' a Tocher— a 

song 287 

— the dusty Miller — a song . 215 

— Tutti Taiti," Remarks on . . 321 
Highland Character, The, Re- 
marks on ... . 327 

-Laddie, The— a song . 274,301 

— Lassie, The— a song . . .199 

— Mary— a song .... 242 

— Queen, The, Remarks on . . 293 

— Welcome, The .... 178 

— Widow's Lament, The— a song . 275 
Hill, Peter, Letters to, 410, 419, 432 

451, 454, 462, 475 
Holy Fair, The .... 86 

— Willie, Epitaph on . . .44 

— Willie's Prayer . . .43 
Hood, a ruling elder, Epitaph on 185 
Hornbook, Dr., Death and . 39 
Horse being impounded, On his . 180 
How cruel are the Parents!— a 

song 285 

— long and dreary is the night !— a 

song ' 265 

Howlet face— an epigram . . 182 
Hoy, James, Letters to . . 385, 387 
Hughie Graham, Remarks on . 335 
Humble Petition of Bruar Water, 

The 108 

Humphrey, James, Epitaph on . 186 
Hunting Song .... 290 
I do confess thou art sae fair — a 

song 237 

— dreamed I lay where Flowers 

were springing . . . 189 

— had a Horse and I had nae 

mair," Remarks on . .324 

— hae a wife o' my ain— a song 213 

— wish my love were in a mire, 

Remarks on . . . . 305 
I'll aye ca' in by yon town— a 

song 270 



Burns 



I'll never leave thee," Remarks on 314 
Illegitimate Child, Welcome to his 102 
Illness of a favorite child . . 177 
I'm o'er young to marry yet— a 

song 218 

Impromptu on Mrs. Riddel's birth- 
day 141 

In the Mame of the Nine . . 339 
Independence, Inscription for al- 
tar to 184 

Innocence, Epigram on . . .179 
Inscription on a Goblet . . 184 
Inventory, The . . . .79 
Inverary, On Incivility shown him 

at . . . . . . m 

Invitation, Epigrrv^inatic reply 

to an 180 

— to a Medical Gentleman . . 92 
Is there for honest poverty — a 

song 278 

It is na, Jean, thy bonny face — a 

song 229 

Jaffray, Katherine— a song . 290 
Jamio, come try me— a song . 228 

— Gay," Remarks on . . . 297 
Jeanhie's Bosom — a song . . 260 
Jenny M'Craw — fragment of a 

song .... = 269 

Jessy — r. song 287 

Jockey'r ta'en the Parting Kiss— 

a song . . 262 

John Anderson, my Jo— a song . 223 

— Barleycorn— a ballad . . 192, 

— Bushby's Lamentation — a song 281 

— Hay 'c Bonnie Lassie, ' ' Remarks 

on 309 

— O'Badenyou," Remarks on . 332 
Johnnie Cope," Remarks on . 329 
Johnnie's Gray Breeks, Remarks 

on 299 

Johnny Faa, or the Gypsy Cadder, 

Remarks on . . . . 323 

— Peep— an epigram . . .186 
Johnston, Captain, Letter to . 482 
Johnson, James, Letters to, 374, 422 

500, 510 
Jolly Beggars, The— a cantata . 55 
Joyful "Widower, The— a song . 206 
Katherine Jaffray— a song . . 290 
Kemble, Mrs., Epigram to . Iff. 
Kenmore, Over the Chimney-piece 

at 10g 

Kennedy, John, Epistle to . . 163 
Letters to . . 350, 351, 352, 356 

— Miss, Letter to 490 
Kirk's Alarm, The— a satire . . 119 
Kirk wad let me be," Remarks on 322 
Kiss, Ae Fond— a song . . 232 

— To a 140 

Laddie, lie near me," Remarks on 328 
Laddies by the Banks o 1 Nith, 

The— a song . . .219 
Lady, Letter to a, 1794 . . , 494 

— Mary Ann— a song . . . 247 

— Onlie— a song .... 205 
Lady'.. Coach, Epigram pinned 

on a 183 

— pocket-book, Epigram written 

in a 183 

Lament. A 80, 198 

— for James, Earl of Glencairn 135 ' 



Lament of Mary Queen of Scots . 135 
Landlady, Count the Lawin— a 

song 216 

Lapraik, John, Epistles to 152, 153, 158 
Lass of Ballochmyle, The— a song 202 

— of Ecclef echan, The— a song 275 

— of Livingston," Remarks on . 299 

— of Patie's Mill," Remarks on 300 

— that made the Bed to me — a 

song 274 

Lassie wi' the lint- white locks — a 

song 266 

Last Braw Bridal, The— frag- 
ment of a song . . . 269 

— May a Braw Wooer— a song 285 

— Time I came o'er the Moor 252, 299 
Laura, by G. Tumbull . . .542 
Lawrie, Archibald, Letter to . 357 

— Rev. G., Letter to . . .366 
Lazy Mist, The— a song . . 213 
Leader-haughs and Yarrow," Re- 
marks on ... . 327 

Let not woman e'en complain — a 

song 266 

Lewars, J., Letter to Mr. Burness 513 

— Jessie, Epitaph for . . .188 

On recovery of — an epigram 188 

To — an epigram . . . 188 

To— a poem . . . .148 

Lewie Gordon," Remarks on . 313 
Liberty— a fragment . . . 144 

— Tree of 144 

Lincluden Abbey, Evening view 



of 



125 



Loch Turit, On scaring water- 
fowl in . ... 110 
Lockhart, George, Letter to . 410 
Logan Braes— a song . . . 253 

— John, Letter to 439 

— Major, Epistle to . . .165 

— Susan, To 103 

Lord Gregory— a song . . . 250 

— Ronald, my son, Remarks on 337 

Louse, To a 76 

Love is the cause of my Mourning 317 
Lovely Davies— a song . . 230 

— Lass of Inverness, The— a song 259 

— Polly Stewart — a song . . 260 
Lover's Morning Salute, The— a 

song 264 

Luckless Fortune— a song . . 196 

M n, Miss, Letter to . . .388 

M'Adam, Mr., of Craigengillan, 



Epistle to 
Macaulay, Mr., Letter to . 
Macculloch, David, Letter to 
Mackenzie, Dr., Letter to . 
M'Lehose, Mrs. See Clarinda 

Letters to . 
M'Leod, John, On death of . 
M'Math, John, Epistle to . 
M'Murdo, John, Epigram to 

Letters to . . 437, 458, 492, 493 

— Mrs., Letter to . . . .433 
McPherson's Farewell— a song . 208 
M'Whinnie, Mr., Letter to . 
Maid that tends the Goats," Re 

marks on ... 
Man was made to Mourn 
Mark yonder Pomp — a song 
Marquis, Epitaph on :. pseudo 



165 
435 
499 
362 

562 
106 
159 
180 



351 
305 



284 
179 



73 



Burns 



Martial, On Elphinstone's trans- 
lation of 

Mary !— a song .... 

— To— a song 

— in Heaven, To — a song . 

— Morison — a song . . . . 

— Queen of Scots. Lament of . 
Mary's Dream," Remarks on 
Mary Scott, the flower of Yarrow, 

Remarks on 
Mauchline Belles . 

— Lady, The — a song . 
Maxwell, Dr., Epigram to 

— John, To, on his birthday . 

— Provost, Letter to . 
Medical Gentleman, Invitation 

to a 

Meg o' the Mill— a song . 252, 

Menie— a song 

Merry Ploughman, On a— a song 
Mill, mill O," Remarks on . 
Miller, Captain Patrick, Letters 

to .... 487, 

— Miss, Epigram to 

— Peter, Jr., Letter to 

Mirk Night o' December, The— a 
song 

Miss , Letters to . . 349, 

Mitchell, Collector, To 

Letter to 

Moffat Inn, Epigram at 

Monboddo, Elegy on Miss Bur- 
net of 

Monody on a Lady famed for ca- 
price 

Montagu, Mrs. Basil. See Benson 

Montgomery's Peggy— a song . 

Moore, Dr., Letters to, 365, 366, 
380, 425, 431, 457, 

Morning Chronicle, Editor of, To 

Morrison, Mr. , Letter to . 

Mother to her Infant— an epigram 

Mother's Lament, A . 

Mountain Daisy, To a . 

Mouse, To a 

Muir, Robert, Letters to, 351, 356, 
361, 381, 

Murdoch, John, Letters to, 343, 

Musings on the Roaring Ocean — a 
song 

My ain kind Dearie, O . 242, 

— Bonny Mary— a song . 

— Collier Laddie— a song . 

— Dear Jockey, Remarks on 

— Dearie, if thou die, Remarks on 

— Father was a Farmer— a song 

— Handsome Nell— a song . 

— Harry was a gallant gay— a 

song 

— Heart's in the Highlands— a 

song 

— heart was once as blithe and 

free — a song .... 

— Hoggie— a song 

— Jean ! — a song .... 

— Jo Janet, Remarks on . 

— Lady's Gown — a song 

— Love she's but a lassie yet — a 

song 

— Lovely Nancy— a song . 

— Nannie, O— a song 






190 



My Nannie's Awa'— a song . 233 

— Peggy's Face— a song . . 207 

— Spouse, Nancy— a song . . 258 

— Tocher's the Jewel— a song 236,336 

— wife's a winsome wee thing— a 

song 242 

Nancy's Ghost (Dr. Blacklock) 325 

Nature's Law 105 

Newspaper, On receiving a free 

subscription to a . . . 128 

Nichol, William, Letters to 375, 376 

378, 452, 475 

Nightingale, The, by G. Turnbull 542 

Nineteenth Psalm, The (first six 

verses) .... 38 
Nithside, In a hermitage at . . 114 
Nithsdale's Welcome Hame — a 

song 239 

Noisy polemic, Epitaph on a . 186 
Now Spring has clad the grove in 

green 286 

O, aye my wife she dang me — a 

song 291 

— Bonny was yon Rosy Brier — a 

song 284 

— can ye labor lea — a song . 229 

— fickle Fortune, O— a song . 201 

— for ane-and-twenty, Tarn !— a 

song 238 

— guid ale comes— a song . . 276 

— how can I be blithe— a song . 236 

— Kenmure's on and awa'— a song 248 

— Lassie, art thou sleeping yet— a 

song . . . . . 279 

— lay thy loof in mine, lass— a 

song 262 

— Luve will venture in— a song . 240 

— Mally's meek, Mally"s sweet— a 

song 262 

— merry hae I been— a song . . 227 

— Ono Chrio," Remarks on . 314 

— Open the Door," Remarks on 294 

— Philly, happy be that day— a 

song 267 

— poortith cauld— a song . . 249 

— saw ye my Dearie — a song . 245 

— Steer her up— a song . . 272 

— that I had ne'er been married 

—a song . 289 

— Tibbie, I hae seen the day . . 190 

— Wat ye Wha's in yon town — a 

song . ... 282 

— Wat ye what my Minnie did?— a 

song 276 

— were I on Parnassus Hill — a 

song 211 

— were my love yon lilac fair— a 

song 258 

— wert thou in the cauld blast>— a 

song 287 

— wha is she that lo'es me? — a 

song 291 

— whistle, and I'll come to you, 

my lad ... 208, 255 

— why the deuce should I repine 37 

— Willie brewed a peck o' maut 

— a song .... 218 
Ode to Memory of Mrs. Oswald 115 

— to Ruin 82 

O'er the Moor amang the 

Heather," Remarks on . 337 



Burns 



74 



Of a r the Airts the wind can Blaw 

—a song 210 

On the seas and far away— a song 263 
O'Neil, Shelah— a song . . .291 
Onlie, Lady— a song . . . 205 
Open the door to me, O — a song . 251 
Ordination, The .... 76 
Oswald, Mrs., Ode to Memory of 115 
Our Thrissles flourished fresh and 

fair 226 

Out over the Forth— a song . 259 

Owl, To the 125 

Painter, Epigram to a . . .176 
Parker, Hugh, Epistle to . . 168 
Parson's Looks, Tne— an epigram 183 
Parvenu, The— an epigram . 184 
Pastoral Poetry, On . . .143 
Patison, Mr., Letter to . . 375 
Peg Nicholson, Elegy on . . 127 
Peggy— a song . . . .194 
Phillis the Fair— a song . . 254 
Piper, The— fragment of a song 289 
Pitt, William, Letter to . . 507 

Pioughmaa, The — a song . . 216 
'•Pol wart on the Green," Re- 
marks on ... 315 
Poor and Honest Lodger— a song 251 
Posie, The, Remarks on . . 3J4 

Prayer, A 3~> 

— -" O, Thou dread Power " . . 93 

— in Prospect of Death . . 37 
Preface to Remarks on Volume H. 

of Museum . . . 315 
Prologue for Mr. Sutherland's 

Benefit . . . .126 

— spoken at Dumfries Theater . 124 

— spoken by Mr. Woods . . 104 
Provost of Dumfries, Letter to . 508 
Psalm, The First .... 38 

— Nineteenth 38 

Queensbury, Duke of, Stanzas on 127 
Ramsay, Allan, Songs of . 293^339 
Rankme, John, Epistle to . . 149 

To . . . . 139, 181, 188 

Rantin' Dog the Daddie o't, The 

—a song 197 

Rattlin' Roarin' Willie— a song 217 
Rav ing Winds around her blow- 
ing—a song .... 209 
Red, Red Rose, A— a song . . 259 
Remarks on Scottish Songs . 293 
Remorse— a fragment . . .67 

— (Commonplace-book) . . 580 
Renwick, Mrs. Jean, Song to . 221 
Reply to an Invitation — an epi- 
gram 177 

Reproof, The— an epigram . 178 
Richardson, Gabriel, Epitaph on 181 
Richmond, John, Letters to, 350, 355, 
356, 330 
Riddel, Captain, To, of Glenrid- 

del . . ... 115 

— Captain Robert, Letters to, 441, 442 

579 
Sonnet on death of . . 143 

— Mrs., of Woodley Park, Epi- 

taph on ... . 182 

Impromptu on her birthday 141 

Letters to. See Letters . 342 

Rights of Woman, The . . 139 
Rigs of Barley, The . . .194 



Robin— a song .... 196 

— Shure in Hairsfr— a song . . 290 
Rose, Mrs., Letter to . . .398 
Rosebud by my Early Walk, A— a 

song 206 

— To the. Remarks on . . . 338 
Roslin Castle," Remarks on . 295 
Rosslyn Inn, To landlady of . 179 
Ruin, Ode to .82 
Ruined Maid's Lament, The— a 

song 289 

Ruisseaiix, Robert, Elegy on, 

Death of .... 38 
Sae far Awa'-a song . . . 273 

— Merry as we Twa hae been, Re- 

marks on .... 310 
Saint James Lodge, Farewell to 

— a song . . . . .201 
Saw ye Johnnie Cummin," Re- 
marks on ... 295 

— ye my Phely ?— a song . . 265 

— ye nae my Peggie? Remarks on 296 
Schoolmaster, Epitaph on a . 179 
Scotch Bard, On a . . . .89 

— Distillers, Letter to . . 507 

— Drink 65 

Scott, Mrs., of Wauchope House, 

Epistle to . . . .166 

— Jeannie, Epigram to . . 186 
Scottish Songs, Remarks on . . 293 
Sensibility, On . . . .139 
Sharpe, Charles, Letter to . . 448 
She is a winsome wee thing— a song 242 

— rose and let me in," Remarks on 312 

— says she lo'es me best of a'— a 

song 263 

Sheep's-head, On a . .181 

Shelah O'Neil— a song . . .291 
Shepherd's Preference," Re- 
marks on ... . 332 
Sheriff -Muir, Battle of . .223 
She's fair and fause — a song . 241 
Sic a wife as Willie had— a song 240 
Simmer's a pleasant time — a song 23 ) 
Simpson, William, Epistie to . 155 
Since robbed of all that charmed 

my view," Remarks on . 322 
Sinclair, Sir John, Letter to . 447 
Sketch inscribed to C. J. Fox . 117 

— New-Years Day . . . 123 

— of a character .... 106 
Skinner, Rev. John, Letters to, 336, 397 
Slave's Lament, The — a song . 247 
Sloan, Thomas, Letter to . . 470 
Smellie. William, Extempore on 178 

Letter to 474 

Smiling Spring comes in rejoic- 
ing—a song . . . .241 

Smith, James, Letters to 355, 376, 378 
405 

Epistle to 161 

Epitaph on . . . .177 

" Soger Laddie," Remarks on . 338 

Songs 189 

Sonnets: Riddel, R., Death of .143 

— Thrush singing in a morning 

walk 141 

Sons of Old Killie, The— a song 201 
Southland Jenny," Remarks on . 335 
Staig, Jessie, Epigram on recov- 
ery of 183 



75 



Burns 



" Star." Editor of, Letter to . 420 

— Epigram to Editor of . . ISO 
Stay, my Charmer— a song . 208 
Stewart, Prof. Dugald, Letters to 

40(3, 427 

— Mrs., of Stair, Letter to . . 338 
Stirling Palace, On Viewing . 178 
Strathallan's Lament— a song . 209 
Strephon and Lydia," Remarks 

on 316 

Stuarts, Epigram on the . . 178 
Suicide, Epitaph on a . . 183 
Sweet Sensibility . . . .139 
Sweetest May— a song . . 290 
Sweetheart, To an old . . .93 
Sylvander (pseud.). See Burns. 562 
Syme, Mr., Extempore to . .184 

— John, Letter to . . 496 
Tailor, The— a song . . .225 
Tait, Crawford, Letter to . . 459 

— James, Epistle to 170 
Tak your auld cloak about ye," 

Remarks on . . . .321 
Tarn Glen— a song . . . 225 

— O'Shanter— a tale . . .130 

— Samson's Elegy ... 94 

— the Chapman, Epitaph on . 185 
Tarry Woo." Remarks on . . 306 
Taylor, John, To . . . .116 
Tears I shed must ever Fall," Re- 
marks on ... . 338 

— of Scotland," Remarks on . 318 
Tennent, John, Letter to . . 424 
Thanksgiving for Naval . . 187 
Then guidwife count the Lawin," 

Remarks on .... 336 
Theniel Menzie's Bonnie Mary— a 

song 215 

There was a bonny lass— a song 276 

— was a lass— a song . . 199 

— was a wife— a song . . . 292 

— was a Youth in this City— a song 226 
There's nae luck about the House, ' ' 

Remarks on . . . . 306 

— news, lasses, news— a song . 292 
There'll never be Peace till Jamie 

comes hame . . . 230 
This is no my ain house," Re- 
marks on ... . 328 

— is no my ain lassie— a song . 286 
Thomson, Address to the shade 

of 137 

— George, Correspondence with 514 
Thou hast left me ever— a song 257 
Though fickle fortune has de- 
ceived me 176 

Thrush, On Hearing a . . .141 
Tibbie Dunbar— a song . . . 222 
Tither Morn, The— a song . . 244 
To Daunton me— a song . 324, 216 
Toast, The 184 

— to Miss Lewars . . .188 
Todlen Hame," Remarks on . 333 
Toothache, Address to the . lis 
Torbolton Lasses, The . . . 33 
Tragic fragment .... 33 
Tranent Muir," Remarks on .315 
Tree of Liberty. The ... 144 
True Loyal Natives, The— an epi- 
gram 185 

Tulloclii-orum." Remarks on . 333 



Tune your Fiddles," Remarks 

on 325 

Turnbull, Gavin, Poems by . 542 

Song by 541 

Turner, Andrew, Epigram on . 187 
Turnimspike, The," Remarks on . 301 
Twa Dogs, The— a tale . . 72 
Twa Herds, The, or the Holy 

Tulzie 41 

'Twas na her bonny blue ee— a 

song 285 

Tweed-side, Remarks on . . 303 
Tytler, A. F., Letter to . . 463 

— William, To . . . .110 
Unco Guid, Address to the . 78 
Up and Warn a' Willie," Re- 
marks on ... . 325 

— in the Morning early— a song . 217 
Violent Grief, Under ... 93 
Vision, A— a song .... 259 
Vowels, The— a tale . . .137 

W , Epitaph on . . . . 179 

Wae is my Heart — a song . . 261 
Walker, Mr., Letter to . . .383 
Waly, waly, Remarks on . . 319 
Wandering Willie— a song . . 233 

War Song 231 

Wat, Epitaph on . . . .187 
Waterfowl, On scaring some . 110 
Waukrife, Minnie, A," Remarks 

on 333 

Waulking of the Fauld," Re- 
marks on ... 314 
Weary Fa' you, Duncan Gray— a 

song 215 

— Pund o' Tow, The— a song . 247 
Wee Johnny, Epitaph on . . 185 

— Willie Gray— a song . . . 228 
Welcome to General Dumourier 

—a song 252 

Werena my Heart Light I wad 

die" 317 

Wha is that at my Bower-door? 269 
What can a young Lassie do? . 236 
Whelpdale, Mrs. (To Chloris) . 145 
When Clouds do come together 

—a song . . . .196 

— first I saw Jennie's face— a song 221 

— I think on the happy days— a 

song 290 

— I upon thy Bosom lean," Re- 

marks on ... . 326 

— Rosy May comes in wi' flowers 

—a song 222 

Where wad Bonnie Annie lie?" 

Remarks on . . . . 336 
Whistle, The .... 120 

— and 141 come to you— a song . 208 

— o'er the lave o't— a song . 228 
Whitefoord, John, Letter to . .392 
Will ye go to the Ewebughts," 

Remarks on . . .313 

— ye go to the Indies, my Mary? 

—a song 200 

Williams, Miss, Letters to 393, 438 
Willie Chambers .... 94 
Wilson, John, the printer, Epi- 
taph on ... . 185 
Wilt thou be my dearie?— a song . 260 
Winter — a dirge .... 33 

— is Past, The— a song . . . 213 



Burns 
But 



76 



Winter Night, A .... 

— of Life, The— a song . 
Woman, Rights of 
Women's Minds— a sokg 
Woodlark, Address to the . 
Woimded Hare, On seeing a . 
Wrapper, Written in a 
" Yarico," On Mrs. Kemble as . 
Ye gods, was Strephon's picture 

blest," Remarks on 

— hae lien wrang, lassie— a song 

— Jacobites by Name— a song . , 



63 


Year 1788, Elegy on . . . 


115 


270 


Yon Wild Mossy Mountains— a 


18.) 


song .... 


237 


22. > 


Young Damon," Remarks on . 


322 


2m 


— Highland Rover. The— a song 


209 


117 


— Jamie, pride of the plain— a 


123 


song 


277 


182 


— Jessie— a song . 


251 




— Jockey — a song 


22/ 


322 


— Lady in Church, Epigram to . 


177 


22(j 


— Man's Dream," Remarks on 


317 


24'. 


— Peggy— a song .... 


19? 



Lon. 



Burns, Robert - 

After visiting birthplace of - 

At grave of - -- - ' J - 

Beauties of nature - - - * 

Cotter's Saturday night - 

Emblems of flowers 

For a' that and a 1 that - 

Letters of. See Letters. 

Letters to George Thomson 

Lilac, The ----- 

Man was made to mourn - 

— Memoir of - - - 

Ode to memory of - - 

On visiting tomb of 

Prayer in prospect of death 

■ Sonnet to - 

■ Their groves of sweet myrtlo - 

Thrush, The ----- 

To a mountain daisy - 

To the sons of - 

Burns, Mrs. Robert, Letters to - 

— William, Letter to 
Burrington. The beautiful 
Burton, Mr. , Epitaph for - 

Bury the great duke ----- 
Bush Aboon Traquair, Remarks on 

— and vale thou fill'st again 
Bushby, John, Epitaph on 
Lamentation of - 

Bushy, servant, c. in Richard ii. - 
Business ------- 

Bust of Dante. (Thos. W. Parsons.) - 
Busy inquiring heart, what would'st 
But a shirt and a half in all - 

— all may now to God draw nigh - 

— anxious cares already seized the queen 

— art thou thus indeed alone? - 

— be contented when that fell arrest - 

— by the storms of circumstance 

— do thy worst to steal thyself away - 

— doth it, Lord, thy wonder raise - 



397; Whi. 186 

- Keats 266 

- Wor. 252 

- Fav. 195 

- Fav. 

Flo. 



91 
515 



Fav. 123 



Burns 514 

Flo. 176 

- Fav. 
Burns 

- Cam. 
Keats 254 

- Fav. 44 
Keats 255 

- Flo. 119 
Flo. 

- Flo. 
Wor. 

Burns 512 

Burns 432 

- Fav. 168 
Burns 180 

- Ten. 246 
Burns 311 

- Goe. 63 
Burns 187 
Burns 281 

Sha. 356 

- Her. 204 
Fav. 446 



249 

5 

157 



317 
17 

254 



242 
402 
250 
192 



- Her. 

Sha. 

- Wes. 

Vir. 

White 223 

Sha. 1037 

- Wor. 634 

Sha. 1039 

- Wes. 295 



77 



Burns 
But 



But eartlilier happy is the rose - 

— error wounded writhes with pain 

— faith, fanatic faith once wedded fast 

— flies an eagle flight bold - 

— God said, I will have a purer - 

— he deep musing o'er the mountain - 

— here no cannon thunders 

— how can he expect that others should 

— I am constant as the northern star 

— I have that within which passeth show 

— I will wear my heart upon my sleeve - 

— if thou otherwise ordain - 

— in chaste hearts uninfluenced by the power Wor. 

— in the gross and scope of my opinion - Sha. 

— in the way of bargain ----- Sha. 

— kings may spare their labor vain Wes. 



Sha. 

Bry. 
Moore 

Sha. 
Erne. 
Odys. 
Wor. 
Wor. 

Sha. 

Sha. 

Sha. 
Wes. 



162 
182 
401 
741 
101 
197 
333 
179 
774 
813 
879 
109 
231 
812 
396 
172 
Burns 270, 548 



lately seen in gladsome green 

— let a lord once own the happy lines - Pope 51 

— liberty and triumphs on the Main - - Wor. 379 

— looks through nature up to nature's God Pope 219 

— love is blind, and lovers cannot see - - Sha. 189 

— mice and rats and such - - - - Sha. 864 

— nature whistled with her winds - - - Erne. 287 

— neath yon crimson tree ----- Bry. 69 

— never yet the man was found - - - Erne. 280 

— not the genial feast, now flowing - - Iliad 297 

— now (the warm enthusiast cries) - - - Wes. 173 

— oh ! estrange once — it boots not how - Wil. 9 

— only three in all God's universe - - - Bro. 152 

— our new heraldry is hands not hearts - Sha. 897 

— Pallas now Tytides, soul inspires - - Iliad 128 

— pleasures are like poppies spread - - Burns 132 

— quiet to quick bosoms is a hell - - Byron 307 

— rarely seen since nature's birth - - Burns 188 

— seeing that, for all her loving will - I. S. S. 44 

— she abasing still her glorious eyes - - I. S. S. 62 

— she is in her grave, and, oh - - - - Wor. 104 

— that entrance, Selma Col. 87 

— that the dread of something after death - Sha. 826 

— that thou art my wisdom, Lord - - Her. 184 

— the jingling of the guinea helps the - - Ten. 91 

— the silence was unbroken - - - - Poe 52 

— the sin forgiven by Christ hi heaven - - Wil. 281 

— the test of affection's a tear - - - Byron 156 

— the trail of the serpent is over them - Moore 417 

— then it shall be well - - - - - P. of F. 132 

— thinks, admitted to that equal sky - - Pope 189 

— thousands die without or this - - - Pope 244 

— thy eternal summer shall not fade - - Sha. 1030 

— to outweigh all harm, the sacred book - Wor. 368 



But 
By 



78 



But to remote Northumbrian royal hall - - Wor. 357 

— to see her was to love her - Burns 232 

— touch me, and no minister so sore - - Pope 280 

— wake the trumpet's blast again - - Moore 538 

— we have daisies, which like love - - - Flo. 64 

— we who now thy grace implore - - Wes. 296 

— were I loved — a sonnet ----- Ten. 477 

— what if one, through grove or flowery mead Wor. 359 

— what is this? The sacred beetle - - - Hoi. 201 

— what is truth? 'Twas Pilate's question put Cow. 290 

— what's so blessed-fair that fears - - - Sha. 1039 

— when I tell him he hates flatterers - - Sha. 771 

— whence came they who for the Savior - Wor. 364 

— wherefore do not you a mightier way - Sha. 1030 

— wherefore do you droop? - Fav. 61 

— whilst this muddy vesture of decay - - Sha. 202 

— whither have these gentle ones - - Moore 609 

— who shall see ------ Moore 345 

— why do you go? said the lady - - - Bro. 591 

— will the gracious Lord - Wes. 73 

— with an angry wafture of your hand - - Sha. 771 

— woe awaits a country when - - - Scott 87 

— words are things and a small drop - Byron 369 

— yesterday the word of Caesar - - - Sha. 778 

Butcher, A - - - Hood 568 

Butler, an Irishman, c. in The Piccolomini - Col. 407 

Butler, Samuel, Epitaph on Pope 350 

Love - - Fav. 330 

Buttercups. (Eliza Cook.) - Flo. 52 

— and daisies. (Mary Howitt.) - - - Flo. 535 

— Poesy of -------- Flo. 52 

Butterfield, Mrs. A. M. To a portrait - - Fav. 185 

Butterfly and snail. (Fable of Gay.) - - Cow. 649 

— in a crowded street. (W. P. Palmer.) - Flo. 379 

— To a - - - - - - - - Wor. 79, 101 

— To the - - - - - - Rog. 249; Flo. 344 

Butts, Dr. , c. in Henry viii. - Sha. 592 

Buyers, The - - Goe. 240 

By a blest husband guided, Mary came - - Wor. 489 

— a murmuring stream a fair shepherdess - Burns 317 

— a route obscure and lonely - - - - Poe 94 

— adventuring both I oft found - - - Sha. 182 

— Allan stream I chanced to rove — a song Burns 255 

— and by is easily said Sha. 830 

— antique fancy trimmed ----- Wor. 297 

— art's bold privilege warrior - - - Wor. 247 

— ceaseless action, all that is exists - - Cow. 255 

— chain yet stronger must the soul be - - Wor. 377 

— every sweet tradition — a sonnet - - - Hood 166 

— fate not option, frugal nature - - - Erne. 120 



79 



But 
By 



By fire and cloud, across the desert - - Whi. 201 

— flatterers besieged, and so obliging - - Pope 270 

— foreign hands thy dying eyes were closed Pope 91 

— heaven methinks it were an easy task - Sha. 386 

— his evening fire the artist - - - - Lon. 132 

— love are blest the God on high - Sch. 48 

— love subsists all lasting grandeur - - Wor. 591 

— many names and guides doth God - P. of F. 182 

— Moscow, self -devoted to a blaze - - Wor. 283 

— my penny of observation - Sha. 145 

— none but me can the tale be told - - Ros. 192 

— playful smiles (alas ! too oft - - - - Wor. 489 

— Rufus hall, where Thames polluted flows Tho. 430 

— strangers left upon a lonely shore - - Cam. 181 

— such examples moved to unbought pains Wor. 359 

— that lake whose gloomy shore - - Moore 237 

— that sin fell the angels - - - - Sha. 612 

— that the Maunciple had his tale endid - - Cha. 503 

— the angels ranged in ranks - - - P. of F. 114 

— the dread and viewless powers - - - Hem. 240 

— the Feal's wave benighted - Moore 273 

— the fireside ------- Lon. 129 

— the glorious book we have sent - - P. of F. 35 

— the gray sand-hills o'er the cold sea-shore - Mer. 272 

— the heavens walled with silver signs - P. of F. 106 

— the high dawn - - - - - P. of F. 49 

— the hope within us springing - - - Moore 229 

— the mighty minster's bell - Hem. 353 

— the mossy brink ------ She. 566 

— the pricking of my thumbs - Sha. 801 

— the river - - - -' - - - Goe. 46, 237 

— the rivers of Babylon we sat - - Byron 195 

— the rude bridge that arched - Eme. 139 

— the rushy fringed bank - Flo. 26 

— the seaside ------- Lon. 122 

— the sky and the night star - - P. of F. 87 

— the soft green light in the woody glade - Hem. 423 

— the still streams of Babylon - - - Byron 264 

— the streams that ever flow - Flo. 131 

— the ten holy eves and the dawns - - P. of F. 131 

— their floating mill ------ Wor. 152 

— thine own tears thy song must - - - Ros. 257 

— those who themselves more bravely - - Goe. 369 

— thy spirit's inspiration --'-.'- Wes. 302 

— ties mysterious linked our fated race - - Scott 427 

— vain affections unenthralled - Wor. 489 

— what rule, stranger, shall we fix thy date - Flo. 325 

— what word's power, the key of paths - Ros. 229 

— whom was David taught ... - Cow. 54 

— wisdom, manhod, and by gret labour - Cha. 474 



Byron 



80 



By woodland belt, by ocean bar - - - Mer. 185 

— yon castle wa' at the close of the day - Burns 230 

— your truth she shall be true - Bro. 287 
Byron, lady, On hearing of illness of - - Byron 22Q 
BYRON, LORD GEORGE GORDON, Poems of: 



Abydos, After swimming from 
Sestos to .... 

— Bride of 

Adrian's address to his Soul . 
JEgle, beauty and poet 
^Eschylus, From the Prometheus 

of 

Ah! Triumph sorrow 

All is Vanity, saith the Preacher 

Alva, Oscar of — a tale . 

Ambracian Gulf, written in pass- 
ing the 

Anacreon, From . . . 133, 

And thou art dead .... 

— wilt thou weep 
Answer to elegant verses 

— to lines by Rousseau 

Antitheses 

Athens. Maid of . 

Augusta, Epistle to 

— stanzas to 

Away, away, ye notes of woe 
Babvlon, By the Rivers of . 
Beecher, Rev. J.T., To . 
Belshazzar. Vision of . 

Blank leaf of "Pleasures of Mem- 
ory," On .... 

Bonaparte, Napoleon, Ode to 

Bonnivard, Francois de. (Pris- 
oner of Chillon.) 

Bride of Abydos, The . 

Bright b3 the place of thy soul 

By the rivers of Babylon we sat . 

Byron, Lord, Life of . 

— Lady, On hearing of her illness 
Cain— a mystery .... 
Calmar and Orla, Death of . 

Canzone 

Caroline. To ... 135, 

Catullus, Imitated from 

— Translations from 
Chain I gave, The 
Change of Masters, On a 
Characters: Adah 

— Adam 

— Angel of the Lord 

— Ari manes 

— Cain 

— Chamois Hunter 

— Destinies, The . . " 

— Eve Cain 

— Herman . . Manfred 

— Lucifer .... Cain 

— Manfred . . .Manfred 

— Manuel ... " 

— Nemesis . . . " 

— Saint Maurice, Abbot of " 

— Witch of the Alps 

— Zillah Cain 

— Zuleika, Bride of Abydos. 
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage— a ro- 

maunt 

Childish Recollections 



134 



Cain 



Manfred 

Cain 

Manfred 



Chillon, Prisoner of— a fable. . 82 

— Sonnet on . . . . . 82 
Churchill's grave .... 262 
Clare, Earl of, To 174 
College Examination, Suggested 

by 153 

Common Lot, The . . . 166 
Condolatory Address . . . 257 
Corinth, Siege of ... 64 

Cornelian, The ' . . . . 154 

— Heart, On a . . . .253 

Corsair, The 28 

Cup, Inscription on a . . . 229 
Curse of Minerva, The . . .199 

D , To 131 

Damaetas 143 

Darkness . . . . .261 
Daughter, To my . . . .239 
Death of Calmar and Orla . 167 
Dedication to Don Juan . . . 316 
Delawarr, Earl, To George . 174 
Destruction of Jerusalem . . 195 

— of Sennacherib, The . . 195 
Do we not hear that youth? . . 235 
Domestic Pieces .... 222 

Don Juan 316 

Dorset, Duke of, To the . . 137 

Dream, The 203 

Drury Lane Theater, At opening 

of 249 

E , To 130 

Elegy on Newstead Abbey . . 159 

Eliza, To 157 

Elm, Written beneath an . .176 

Emma, To 134 

Emma L., To 256 

England, Farewell to . . .236 
English Bards and Scotch Re- 
viewers—a satire . . 177 
Episode of Nisus and Euryalus . 148 
Epitaphs: Friend, On a . . 131 

— Virgil and Tibullus, On . . 133 

— You that seek what life is . 261 
Euripides, Translation from . 152 
Euryalus, Episode of . . .148 

Euthanasia 247 

F . To 255 

Faint Heart never won fair Lady 243 
Fame and Fortune .... 259 
Fare thee well .... 222 
Farewell ! if ever fondest prayer 228 

— to England . . . .236 
Fill the goblet again— a song . 232 
First Kiss of Love, The . . 137 

Florence, To 233 

Fox, Charles James, On Death of 155 
Fragments . . . 131, 139, 263 

— of Incomplete poem . . 268 
France, Lily of, To the . . . 241 
Friend, For a .... 242 

— To a youthful . . . .228 
Friendship (in French) . . 256 

— is Love without his wings ! . 169 



81 



£ y 

Byron 



French. From the ... 253 

— Ode from the . . . .259 
G. M. S., To . . . . 135, 141 
Genevra, Sonnets to 254 
George. Earl Delawarr, To . 174 

Giaour, The 1 

Good-Night! (Childe Harold.) . 280 
Granta— a melody .... 139 
Greece, Isles of . . . . 368 
Greek War-song translated . . 244 
Harp the Monarch Minstrel swept 190 
Harrow. In Churchyard of . . 176 

— on the Hill. View of . . 140 
Herod's Lament for Mariamne . 194 
Horace. Translation froru . 133 
Horn's of Idleness . . . .130 
How happy do I wish thee . 256 
I saw thee Veep . . . .192 

— will not rob the rose . . 245 

— would I were a careless child . 172 

Ianthe. To 277 

If sometimes in the haunts of 

men ..... 253 

— that high world . . . .190 
Imitation — ' ' A blithe and bonny 

country lass'' . . . 257 
Inez, To ..... 288 

— de Castro— a dramatic frag- 

ment 266 

Inscription on a dog's monument 230 

— on Cup made from a skull . 229 
Island of St. Helena, Ode to . 240 
Isles of Greece. The . . .368 
Jephtha's Daughter . . .191 
Jerusalem, Destruction of . . 195 
Jessy. To ..... 241 

Job. From 196 

Jordan's Banks, On . . . 191 

L .To 255 

Lacbin. Y. Gair . . . .158 
Lady, To a . 137. 144. 166. 172, 230 
Lady. To a, on leaving England 232 

— weeping. To a . . . . 253 
Lady's Album, In a . . . 264 
Lament of Tasso . . . 200 
L'amitieest L'amour sans Ailes . 169 
Lara— a tale .... 50 
Lavalette, Madame . . .236 
Legion of Honor." On the Star of 260 
Leman, Lake, Sonnet to . . 264 
Lesbia, To ... . 32, 142 

Life 264 

Lily of France. To the . . 241 
Long, Edward Noel, To . .171 
Love, First kiss of . .137 

Love's Last Adieu . . . .143 

31 , To 141 

M. S. G., To . . . . 135, 141 
Macpherson's Ossian. Imitation 

of . . . . . .167 

Maid of Athens, ere we part . 243 
Manfred— a dramatic poem . . 87 
Mariamne, Herod's Lament for 194 

Marion, To 144 

Marsus, Domitius. Epitaph of . 133 
Mary. To, on receipt of picture . 141 
Medea of Euripides, Translation 

from 152 

Minerva, Curse of 199 
Monody on Death of R. B. Sheri- 
dan 275 

6 



Music, Stanzas for . . . .258 
My Soul is Dark .... 192 
Napoleon Bonaparte, Ode to . 197 
Napoleon's Farewell . . .261 
Nature, Prayer of . . . .170 
Newfoundland Dog, On monu- 
ment of a . . . .230 
Newstead Abbey, Elegy on . 159 

on leaving . . . .131 

Nisus and Euryalus, Episode of 148 
O, snatched away in Beauty's 

Bloom 191 

— weep for those . . . .191 
Occasional pieces . . . 228 
Ode from the French . . . 259 

— O. shame to thee . . . 235 

— to Island of St. Helena . . 240 

— to Napoleon Bonaparte . . 197 

— to the Past 245 

On hearing Lady Byron was ill 226 

— Jordan's banks . . . .191 
One struggle more and I am free 247 
Orchomenus. In traveler's book at 243 
Origin of Love, On the . . 252 
Orla. Death of Calmar and . . 167 
Oscar of Alva— a tale . . . 145 
Ossian. Imitation of 167 
Parenthetical Address . . 250 

Parisina 76 

Parker. Sir Peter. On Death of 258 

Parting. On 245 

Picture. Written beneath a . 244 
Pigot. J. M. B., Reply to verses of 156 
Plays: Cain— a mystery . . 104 

— Manfred— a dramatic poem . 87 
Portuguese. From the . . 254 
Prayer of Nature . . . .170 
Prisoner of Chillon— a fable . 82 
Prologue to " Wheel of Fortune " 155 
Prometheus 263 

— Vinctus, From the . . . 134 
Prosperity counts courtiers with- 
out 'end . . . . .250 

Psalm 137. Paraphrase of . .264 
Quaker. To a beautiful . . .154 
Quevedo Redivivus— Vision of 

Judgment . . . .209 
Remember him, whom passion's 

power 252 

— thee! 250 

Remembrance .... 167 
Remind me not . . . .231 
Replv to verses of J. M. B. Pigot 156 
Rivers of Babylon, By the . . 195 
Romaic Love-song translated . 251 

— Song, Translation of . . . 244 
Romance, To ... . 15S 
Rousseau. Jean Jacques. Lines by 132 
Saint Helena, Ode to Island of . 240 
Saul .193 

— Song of 192 

Scotch Reviewers, English Bards 

and 177 

Sennacherib. Destruction of . 195 
Sestos to Abydos, After swim- 
ming from .... 243 
She walks in Beauty ... 190 
Sheridan, Richard* B., On death 

of 275 

Siege of Corinth .... 64 
Sighing Strephon. To the . . 157 



Byron 

Cambridge 



82 



Sketch, A 

Skull, On a cup made from a . 
Solitude, Spirit of— a sonnet . 
Song of Saul before last Battle . 
Sonnets: Chillon, On 

— Genevra, To ... 

— I will not rob the rose 

— Lake Leman, To 

— Prosperity counts Courtiers . 

— Spirit of Solitude 

— The stream whose plaintive 

course 

— What makes us shrink in hor- 

ror 

Spell is Broke, The 

Spirit of Solitude, The — a sonnet 

— passed before me, A . 

Star of "'Legion of Honor," On 

the 

Sun of the Sleepless . 

Sweet Stars of Clear and Cloud- 



y:a 



Swimming from Sestos to Abydos 243 
Tasso, Lament of . . . . 20j 

Tear. A 256 

Tear, The ,156 

There be none of Beauty's daugh- 
ters 259 

— was a time . . . .231 
There's fascination in thy glow- 
ing eye .... 244 

— not a joy the world can give . 258 
Thou art not false . . . 252 



Thunder-storm, Composed dur- 
ing a 233 

Thy days are done . . . 192 

Thyrza, To 246 

Tibullus, Imitation of . . .133 
Time, To .... 246, 251 
Titus— Destruction of Jerusalem . 195 
Translation from Horace . . 133 
Translation from Medea of Euri- 
pides 152 

— of Greek War-song . . . 244 
Translations from Catullus . 132 

— of Romaic Songs . . 244, 251 
Traveler's book at Orchomenus, 

In 243 

Turkish, From the ... 253 
Virgil and Tibullus, Epitaph on . 133 
Vision of Belshazzar . . . 194 

— of Judgment . . . .209 
Warm as the cloudless summer 

morn 265 

We live to learn .... 255 
Well ! thou art happy . . .230 
Were my bosom as false . . 194 
What makes us shrink in horror 242 
When coldness wraps this suffer- 
ing clay .... 193 

— I roved a young Highlander . 1?3 

— we two parted .... 228 
Wild Gazelle, The . . . .191 
Woman, To .... 141 
Young Lady, On the death of a .13) 
To a 142 



Byron, Lord. All is vanity - Fav. 

Alpine violet ------ Fi a 

Carnelian, The ----- Fav. 

Darkness ------- Fav. 

I send the lilies Flo. 

Life of - - Byron 

Manfred's soliloquy - Fav. 

Prayer of nature ----- Fav. 

Solitude ------- Fav. 

Sonnet to - Keats 250 ; She. 

Willow, The ------ Flo. 

Zuleika's rose ------ Flo. 



206 

41 

270 

73 

75 

vii 

20 

146 

122 

508 

141 

09 



C , Mrs., To - 

C; F. W., 1864 .-■■-- 
C.;G. B., To - - - . 
C. ; P., In a letter to 

C. S., To 

Ca' the ewes — a song - 

— the yowes to the knowes 

Cables entangling her 

Cache pour cette Nuict 

Cade, Jack, a rebel, c. in Henry vi 

Cadenabbia — lake of Como 

Cadwal (Arviragus), c. in Cymbeline - 

(.'.-iflymv castlo ----- 



pt. 2 



Burns 103 

Hoi. 218 

- Whi. 248 
Cow. 40 

- Whi. 199 
Burns 229, 263 

Burns 263 

- Hood 543 

- Mer. 237 
Sha. 496 

- Lon. 359 
Sha. 944 

- Scott 349 



Q o Jtyron 

00 Cambridge 

Caesar Borgia, Prologue to - Dry. 490 

Cafe, Au ------- - Mer. 226 

Caged in old woods whose reverend - - Rog. 244 

— lion, To a - - Hoi. 75 

Cain — a mystery ------ Bvron 104 

— Wanderings of ----- - Col. 226 

Caithness, a nobleman, c. in Macbeth - - Sha. 788 

Caius Cestius ------- Rog. 117 

— Doctor, a physician, c. in Merry W. of W. Sha. 42 

— kinsman of Titus, c. in Titus Andronicus - Sha. 688 

— Lucius, a general, c. in Cyinbeline - - Sha. 944 

— Marcius, c. in Coriolanus - Sha. 654 
Calais, Composed at — a sonnet - - - Wor. 269 
Calchas, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - - Sha. 622 
Calderon — Magico Prodigioso - - - She. 537 
Caledonia — a song. "There was once a day " Burns 271 

— " Their groves of sweet myrtle " - - Burns 284 

Calef in Boston - Whi. 144 

Calf, The ------- - Burns 93 

Caliban, a savage slave, c. in Tempest - - Sha. 1 

Calidore, Sir, Legend of - - : - - Spe. 429 

Call it not loneliness to dwell - Hem. 256 

— it not vain — they do not err - Scott 29 ; Fav. 291 

— me not, love, unthankful or unkind - - Mer. 469 

— not the royal Swede unfortunate - - Wor. 280 

— of the Christian, The - Whi. 92 

— on the present day and night - - - Goe. 368 

— The - . - - - - - - - - Her. 256 

— to remembrance, reader, if thou err - Dante 178 

— you that backing of your friends - - - Sha. 391 
Called from above I rise ----- Wes. 302 

Calliope. (Tears of the Muses.) - - - Spe. 586 

Calls on the heart ------ Bro. 291 

Calm as an under current strong - - - Wor. 373 

— at sea — an epigram ----- Goe. 224 

— is all nature ------- Wor. 15 

— is the fragrant Lir ----- Wor. 390 

— on the bosom of thy God - - - Hem. 377, 489 

— on the breast of Loch Maree - - - Whi. 143 

— the city lay in midnight silence - - - Pro. 407 

— was the day, and through the trembling - Spe. 643 
Calmar and Orla, Death of - Byron 167 
Calpurnia, c. in Julius Caesar - - - Sha. 764 
Calthon and Colmal ------ Oss. 254 

Calumniarum nee pudor quis nee modus? - Her. 573 

Calvert ! it must not be unheard by them - Wor. 233 

Camaldoli, Convent of — a sonnet - - - Wor. 316 

Cambel and Triamond, Legend of - Spe. 281 

Cambrian in America ----- Hem. 245 

Cambridge and the Alps ----- Wor. 535 



Cambridge 
Canst 



84 



Cambridge ballad - 

— churchyard, The - 

— Earl of, c. in Henry v. 

— In the churchyard at - - - 

— Old, Massachusetts 

— University bedel. (Milton.) - 

— See also Harvard. 
Came a pretty maid — a song 

— the dread archer up yonder lawn 
Camillo, c. in Winter's Tale 

— Cardinal, c. in The Cenci - 
Camoens, Luis de. The rose - 
Camp hill, On the - 

— The. (Marmion.) - 
Campagna of Florence - 

— ■ of Rome ------ 

Campbell, Calder. Ivy - 
Sweet sedge - 

— Hay, Epigram on 

— Mary, in heaven, To — a song 
CAMPBELL, THOMAS, Poems of: 



Moore 626 

- Hoi. 2 
Sha. 439 

- Lon. 214 
Hoi. 304 

- Cow. 557 

- Eliot 214 

Ing. 441 

- Sha. 304 
She. 268 

- Flo. 106 
Cam. 232 

- Scott 73 

Rog. 82 

- Rog. 112 

Flo. 180 

- Flo. 212 
Burns 177 
Burns 219 



Absence . . . . . 

Adelgitha 

Alcman, From the Greek of . 
Algiers, Epistle from 
Argyleshire, On visiting 

Bartley, Mrs 

Battleof the Baltic . 

Bavaria, On leaving a scene in . 

Beech Tree's Petition . 

Ben Lomond .... 

Brave Roland 

Burdett, Sir Francis, To . 
Burns, Ode to memory of 
Camp Hill, On the 
Campbell, Thomas, Sketch of 

Caroline 

Cathcart, On revisiting . 
Chaucer and Windsor 

Cherubs, The 

Child and Hind .... 
Colonists for New Zealand . 
Cora Lynn, or Falls of the Clyde 
Dead Eagle, The .... 
Death-boat of Heligoland . 
Dirge of Wallace .... 

Dream, A 

Drink ye to her — a song 

Drinking Song: of Munich . 

Earl March looked on his dying 

child 

Emigrants. On departure of . 
Evening Star. Song to . . 219, 

Exile of Erin 

Farewell to Love .... 

Field Flowers 

Germans. Ode to the . 
Gertrude of Wyoming . 

Gilderoy 

Glenara 

Glencoe, Pilgrim of . . . 



229 
194 
1-2(5 
317 
160 
179 
146 
245. 
220 
3 14 
189 
264 
157 
23-3 
7 
217 
259 
198 
200 
205 
3 IS 
311 
273 
250 
196 
167 
2(H 
255 

252 
256 
226 
153 
233 
22! 
266 
75 
198 
152 
230 



Greeks, Song of the 
Hallowed ground 

Harper, The 

Heligoland, Death-boat of . 
Highland Society, For the . 
Hohenlinden .... 
How delicious is the winning 
Hybrias the Cretan, Song of 
Inscription on monument 
Invasion, On the threatened 
Jilted Nymph. The 

Julia M , Lines to . 

La Perouse's Voyages, On a blank 

leaf of 

Last Man, The 

Launch of a First-rate 

Lochiel's Warning .... 

Lord Ullin's Daughter 

Love and Madness .... 

— Farewell to ... 
Lover to his Mistress 
Maid's Remonstrance . 
Margaret and Dora 
Martial elegy . 

" Medea," Specimens from . 

— Speech of the chorus . 
Men of England ! . 

Moonlight 

My new Child-sweetheart . 
"Name Unknown," The . 
Napoleon and the British Sailor . 
Navarino, On Battle of 

New Year Thought 

— Zealand, Colonists for . 
O'Connors Child .... 
Oratorio, Fragment of an . 
Painting. Stanzas to 

Parrot, The 

Picture of a, girl. On a . 
Pilgrim of Glencoe 



175 
213 
209 
250 
172 
150 
241 
126 
225 
200 
303 
254 

277 
164 
316 
143 
154 
211 



.228 
239 
127 
128 
129 
•2D? 



314 
231 

390 
227' 
240 
31)8 
134 
320 
222 



85 



Cambridge 
Canst 



Pleasures of Hope . . . . 35 < Specter Boat, The 
Poland, Lines on . . . .235 Suicide, On grave of a . 
Portrait of a Child . . . . 306 ! Theodric— a domestic tale 
Power of Russia .... 242 j To Love in my heart 
Queen, Song of our . . . . 314 | Turkish Lady, The . 
Rainbow, To the « . . 162 1 United States, To the . 

Valedictory stanzas . 
Von Winkelried, On the Statue 

of 

"Wallace, Dirge of 

When Love came first to earth . 

— Napoleon was flying 

Winter, Ode to 

Withdraw not yet those lips 

Wounded Hussar. The . 

Ye Mariners of England 

Young Lady's Album, In a . 

Campbell, Thomas. Field flowers - - Flo. 18? 

Hope of an hereafter - Fav. 

Lady-fern - - Flo. 

Pleasures of hope — an extract - - Fav. 

Sketch of ------ - Cam. 



Reullura ...... 182 

Ritter Bann ... . . 201 

Russia, Power of . . . . 242 

Saint Leonard's, On the view from 269 
Scottish River, On revisiting a . 230 
Seal, On receiving a . . .194 
Senex's Soliloquy on his Youthful 

Idol 263 

Soldier's Dream, The . . .161 
Spanish Patriots, To memory of 

the 174 



in 

181 
109 

^6 
If* 

3,_ 

169 



Campeius, Cardinal, c. in Henry viii. - 
Can history prove the truth which - 

— honor's voice provoke the silent dust 

— I cease to care? ----- 

— I make white enough my thought - 

— it be ! of stars the stars - - - - 

— it be right to give what I can give - 

— it be women that walk - - - - 

— restlessness reach the cold - 

— rules or tutors educate ----- 

— storied urn or animated bust 

— the Koran from eternity be? - 

— such things be and overcome us - 

— this be thou who, lean and pale 

— we in unbelievers find - 

— you forget me? (L. E. Landon.) 

— you open that ebony casket? 
Canaan, To — a Puritan war-song - 
Canadian boat-song ----- 

Canceled passages 

Cancioneros — from the Spanish 
Candlish, James, Letters to - 

Candor compels me, Becher ! - - - 
Canidius, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - 
Canker galls the infants of the spring 
Cankers of a calm world 
Cannon to right of them - 
Cannot is false, and that I dare not falser 
Canonization of St. B— tt — rw — rth - 
Canonize him ! — yea, verily, well canonize 
Canst be idle? canst thou play - 

— thou give, oh fair and matchless 

— thou leave me thus — a song - 



- Sha. 

- Mer. 

- Fav. 
Burns 

Ing. 

- Goe. 
Bro. 

- Mer. 
Cam. 

- Erne. 

- Fav. 

- Goe. 
• Sha. 

Low. 

- Wes. 

Flo. 

- Pro. 
Hoi. 

Moore 
She. 

- Lon. 
Burns 369, 377 

Byron 159 

- Sha, 

- Sha, 
Sha, 

- Ten. 
Sha. 

Moore 
Moore 

- Her. 

- Goe. 
Burns 



, 312 

196 
. 252 

253 
. 177 

216 
. 210 

149 
. 320 

529 

205 
116 
157 
7 
592 
294 

31 
283 
464 
378 
154 
271 
250 
232 

31 
380 
800 

87 
18.2 

92 
327 
250 
198 
574 
230 



911 
815 
402 
252 
772 
623 
623 
2C4 
126 
268 



Canst C£ 

Castle ou 

Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased Sha. 807 

— thou, O cruel ! sav I love thee not - - Sha. 1046 
Cantab, The ------ - Cow. 609 

Cantatas, Three ------- Goe. 150 

Canterbury, Archbishop of, c. in Henry v. - Sha. 439 

(Bourchier) c. in Richard hi. - - - Sha. 556 

(Cranmer) c. in Henry viii. - - - Sha. 592 

— Tales, The ------ - Cha. 19 

Canticle of love ------ Mer. 265 

Cantus sacros, profane, mugitus vocas? - - Her. 571 

Canute — a sonnet ------ Wor. 360 

— and Alfred on sea-shore - - - Wor. 424 
Canzone ------ Byron 256 ; Cow. 597 

— from Michelangelo ----- Lon. 394 

— of the Conrito She. 535 

— a sonnet - - Mil. 472 

Canzonet - - White 262 

Cap and bells, The - - - - - - Keats 300 

Cape Ann, Garrison of Whi. 221 

Caphis, a servant, c. in Timon of Athens - Sha. 741 

Capital punishment ------ Whi. 101 

Sonnets on ----- - Wor. 442 

Captain , Letter of Burns 493 

— or colonel or knight in arms - - - Mil. 474 

— The— a legend ------- Ten. 390 

Captain's lady. The — a song - Burns 227 

Captive and the flowers. (Goethe.) - - Flo. 516 

— ribband, The," Remarks on - - - Burns 331 
Captive, The ------- Low. 79 

Captivity — Mary, queen of Scots — a sonnet - Wor. 239 

— The— an oratorio ------ Gol. 162 

Capture of fugitive slaves - Low. 82 

Capucius, an embassador, c. in Henry viii. - Sha. 592 

Capulet, c. in Romeo and Juliet - - - Sha. 712 

— Lady, c. in Romeo and Juliet - - - Sha. 712 
Capys, Prophecy of - Mac. 119 
Cara, To ------ - Moore 120 

Caravan in the deserts ----- Hem. 256 

Card, A. " Poor Vestris " - - - -Cow. 398 

— dealer -------- r os . 102 

Car din' o't, The— a song - Burns 269 

Care keeps his watch in every old man's eye Sha. 721 

— killed a cat - - - - - - - Sha. 130 

Careless of blame while his own heart approves Rog. 201 

— nurse maid ------- Hood 345 

Carelessly over the plain way - - - Goe. 225 

Care's an enemy to life Sha. 282 

Caressed or chidden by the dainty hand - Ten. 391 

Carew, Thomas. To the primrose - - - Flo. 59 

— Lady, Sonnet to - Spe. 28 



ft h Canst 

° • Castle 

Carfrae, Rev. P., Letter to - - - Burns 430 

Carillon - - - Lon. 76 

Carle' now the king's come - Scott 440 

— of Kellyburn braes, The— a song - - Burns 245 
Carles of Dysart — a song - Burns 278 
Carlisle, Bishop, c. in Richard ii. - - - Sha. 356 

— earl of, Ode to White 322 

Carlos, c. in Siege of Valencia - Hem. 434 

Carmilhan, Ballad of - Lon. 280 

Carnelian, The - Byron 154; Fav. 270 

— heart, On a Byron 253 

Carolan's prophecy Hem. 389 

Caroline - - Cam. 217 

— To Byron 135, 136 

Caros, War of ------ Oss. 261 

Carpe diem - Mer. 241 

Carric-thura Oss. 209 

Carrington. To a primrose - - - - Flo. 64 

Carron Inn, Epigram at - Burns 178 

Carthage -------- Sch. 223 

— Marius among the ruins of - - - Hem. 259 
Carthon -------- Oss. 222 

Carver's lesson, The ------ Pro. 255 

Cary, Alice. Among beautiful pictures - Fav. 383 

My creed - Fav. 279 

Casa Guidi windows ----- Bro. 297 

Casabianca ------- Hem. 348 

Casal-Maggiore, Monk of Lon. 304 

Casca, a conspirator, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 

Case of libel, A ------ Moore 640 

Casimir. The hyacinth ----- Flo. 68 

— son of Kiuprili, c. in Zapolya - - - Col. 230 
Cassandra -------- Sch. 152 

— a sonnet ------- R s. 160 

— c. in Troilus and Cressida - Sha. 622 

— c. in Clytemnestra ----- Mer. 348 

— Southwick ------ Whi. 28 

Cassillis' banks — a song Burns 273 

Cassino, Monte, Italy Rog. 158 

Cassio, I love thee, but never - - - Sha. 890 

— lieut. of Othello, c. in Othello - - - Sha. 879 
Cassius, a conspirator, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 
Cast all your cares on God - Ten. 344 

— the bantling on the rocks - Erne. 42 
Castaway, The ------ Cow. 509 

Castel-Cuille, Blind girl of Lon. 135 

Castile, Alphonso of Erne. 27 

Castilian maid, The Moore 651 

Castle builder, the, Fragment of - - Keats 276 
The Lon. 229 



Castle oo 

Cestius °° 

Castle by the sea - Lon. 23 

— Gordon ------- Burns 109 

— in the ah' - Pro. 428 

— in Wales, Composed at a - - - - Wor. 243 

— of indolence ------- Tho. 319 

— of king Macbeth - Mer. 269 

— of the seven shields ----- Scott 327 

— The. (Marmion.) - Scott 48 

— Windeck, Lady of - - - - - - Bry. 157 

Castlemain, lady, To Dry. 271 

Castlereagh administration - She. 414 

Castles in Spain ------- Lon. 373 

— in the air. (J as. Ballantine.) - - - Fav. 347 
Castor and Pollux ------ She. 521 

Castri, View from ------ Hem. 318 

Castriot, G-eorge, Sonnets on history of - Spe. 703 

Castro, Pedro de, From Spanish of - - - Bry. 150 

Casual howe'er our steps may seem - - Wes. 265 

— incitement — a sonnet ----- Wor. 356 
Caswallon's triumph ----- Hem. 248 
Cat-pie — a parable ------ Q- e. 229 

— Eetired - Cow. 484 

— Verses on a - - She. 553 

Catalogue of the forces - - - - - Iliad 70 

— of the ships ------- Hiad 85 

— The -------- Moore 90 

Catarina to Camoens ------ Bro. 99 

Catawba wine ------- Lon. 221 

Catechising — a sonnet ----- Wor. 376 

Catesby, Sir William, c. in Eichard iii. - Sha. 556 

Cath-loda -------- Oss. 189 

Catharina Cow. 490 

Catharum - - Her. 566 

— quendam - • - - - - - - Her. 573 

Cathcart, On revisiting Cam. 259 

Cathedral, The --.-__ Low. 393 

Cathedrals — a sonnet ------ Wor. 380 

Cathlin of Clutha - Oss. 269 

Catholic canton, Composed in a - - - Wor. 295 

Catley, Miss, Epilogue spoken by - - - Gol. 144 

Cato, Prologue to ----- - Pope 92 

— Young, c. in Julius Caesar - - - Sha. 764 
Catterskill falls ------- Bry. 169 

Cattle, Sura of the - - - - - - P. of F. 42 

Catullus, Imitated from - Byron 133 

— Imitation of Moore 105 

— Translation from Moore 603 

— Translations from ----- Byron 132 
Cauld is my bed. lord Archibald - - - Scott 418 

— is the e'enin' blast Burns 272 



8 Q Castle 

ov Cestius 

Cauld kail in Aberdeen, Eemarks on - Burns 320 

Caulkins, Miss F. M. (Rose Standish.) - Flo. 313 

Cause that wit is in other men - Sha. 411 

— won, The ------- Cow. 605 

Cauteretz, In the valley of -.-'-'- Ten. 386 

Cavalcanti, From Guido - - - She. 537 

Cavalier, The— a song -..-_ Scott 215 

Cavalier's march to London - Mac. 205 

Cave of Staffa — a sonnet ----- Wor. 406 

Cavern of the three Tells - Hem. 130 

Cease, Augusta ! cease thy mourning - - Dry. 554 

— cease, my dear friend," Eemarks on - Burns 330 

— oh cease to tempt ----- Moore 647 

— the sighing fool to play - Moore 105 

— ye prudes, your envious railing - - Burns 178 
Cecil, Sir William, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 
Cecile, an attendant, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 232 
Cecilia's day, Ode on. (Dry den.) - - - Fav. 101 
Cede, Meles, cedat depressa Mincius urna - Mil. 508 
Celandine, Small ------ Wor. 484 

— To the - - - - - Wor. 147; Flo. 138 
Celebrated woman, The ----- Sch. 97 

Celebration of peace Hood 354 

Celebrity — a satire Goe. 233 

Celestial love ------- Erne. 101 

— pilot, The - Lon. 17 

Celia, c. in As You Like It - Sha. 205 

Cenci, The— a play ------ She. 268 

Cenobia, of Palmire, the queene - - - Cha. 462 

Cenotaph near W orcester ----- Wor. 489 

Centenarian, Death of a Cow. 604 

Centenary of Burns, For the - Hoi. 150 

— of Harvard, Song for ----- Hoi. 32 

— of Humboldt ------- Hoi. 272 

Centennial dinner of proprietors of Boston Pier Hoi. 287 

— hvmn, 1876 ------- Whi. 409 

— ode, 1876 ------- Low. 416 

— welcome to the nations, 1876 - - - Hoi. 306 
Centuries old are the mountains - - - Lon. 348 
Ceres, a spirit, c. in Tempest - - - - Sha. 1 

— hath her harvest sweet - Mer. 238 

— Lament - - Sch. 129 

— Ode to Moore 616 

Cerimon, a lord, c. in Pericles - - - - Sha. 977 

Certain ladies, On Pope 395 

— lady at court, On a Pope 369 

Certainty of death Cow. 44 

Cessnock banks — a song - - - - Burns 190 

C'est l'amitie qui nous apprend a vivre - Byron 256 

Cestius, Caius Rog. 117 



Ceylon QA 

Chatham vv 

Ceylon, Cypress-tree of - - - - - Whi. 108 

Chain, A ------- - Pro. Ill 

— I gave thee ------- Byron 253 

— to wear - Mer. 205 

Chained in the market-place he stood - - Bry. 101 

Chains may subdue the feeble spirit - - Bry. 118 

— my good lord, in your raised brows - Ten. 711 
Chalkley haU ----,- -Whi. 107 
Challenge of Thor - - - - - - Lon. 246 

— The- - - - - - -Lon. 229; Pope 378 

Chalmers, Margaret, Letters to, Burns 384, 388, 391, 395 

398, 403, 416 

— William, Letter to - - - - - Burns 362 
Chamber over the gate ----- Lon. 395 

— scene -------- Wil. 259 

Chambered nautilus - - - Hoi. 161 ; Fav. 425 

Chameleons feed on light and air - - - She. 418 

Chamois-hunter, c. in Manfred - - - Byron 87 

— hunter's love ------- Hem. 213 

Chamouni, vale of , Hymn in - - - Col. 168 

Champion famed for warlike toil - - - Scott 437 

— of those who groan beneath - - - Whi. 47 
Chandos, a noble, c. in Halidon Hill - - Scott 462 
Change -------- Mer. 204 

— and fate, Sonnets on Eos. 256 

— me some god, into that breathing rose - Wor. 328 

— of masters, On a - - - - - Byron 137 

— upon change ------ Bro. 296 

— without term, and strife without - - Mer. 299 
Changed -------- Lon. 229 

Changeful comrade, life of mine - - - Eliot 129 

Changeling, A ------ - Pro. 286 

— The - Low. 90 ; Whi. 304 

Changes ------ Mer. 463; Pro. 88 

Channel, In the — a sonnet ----- Wor. 402 

Channing, William E., Elegy on - - - Low. 104 

-In memory of ----- - Whi. 132 

To - - - - - - - - Lon. 41 

Channing, William Henry, Ode to - - - Erne. 71 

Chanounes Yemannes tale - Cha. 352 

Chanson without music Hoi. 286 

Chant, A ------- - Pro. 247 

— of the bards Hem. 250 

— over the dead Scott 455 

Chaos of thought and passion - - - Pope 194 

Chapel of the hermits Whi. 153 

Chaplet of flowers Pro. 369 

— of verses, A Pro. 357 

Chapman's Homer, On first looking into - Keats 246 

Character Erne. 231 



Q1 Ceylon 

v± Chatham 

Character, A - Ten. 15; Wor. 413 

— A — an epigram - Hog. 241 

— A. (Italy.) Eog. 149 

— of a good parson Dry. 430 

— of the happy warrior Wor. 422 

Characteristics of a child - Wor. 80 
Characters of plays. See general alphabet and 

under names of authors. 

Charade — a sonnet ------ G-oe. 221 

Charge, Chester, charge - Scott 104 

— of the heavy brigade, at Balaklava - - Ten. 728 

— of the light brigade Ten. 252 

Charity Cow. 184; Moore 102 

— (anon.) - Fav. 215 

— (E. H. W.) Whi. 398 

Charlemagne ------- Lon. 294 

Charles I. — fragment of play - - - She. 482 

a sonnet - Wor. 371 

Charles II. — a prologue ----- Dry. 493 

a sonnet ------- Wor. 372 

To - - - - - - - - Dry. 37 

Charles VI. of France, c. in Henry v. - - Sha. 439 

of France, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 232 

Charles, and I say it wondering - - - Cow. 597 

— earl of Dorset, Epitaph on Pope 342 

— my slow heart was only sad - Col. 99 

— the dauphin, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - - Sha. 469 

— wrestler of Frederick, c. in As You Like It Sha. 205 

— Edward at Versailles ----- Ayt. 134 

— river, To the - Lon. 38 

Charleston, Dr., To - - - - - Dry. 270 

Charlesworth, Letters to White 71, 109, 135, 140, 153, 202 

Charlotte, To ------ Goe. 192 

Charmed picture ------ Hem. 227 

Charmian, attendant, c. in Antony and Cleo- 
patra ------- Sha. 911 

Charms and knots ------ Her. 185 

— strike the sight, but merit - - - Pope 82 
Charnel ship, The. (Lucretia M. Davidson.) - Fav. 263 
Charon ! receive a family on board - - Cow. 517 

— Eefusalof - Ayt. 200 

Charter-breakers, Curse of the - - - Whi. 76 

Chartist's complaint Erne. 197 

Charybdis, Sirens, Scylla and - - - Odys. 172 

Chase, The. (Lady of the Lake.) - - - Scott 110 

Chaste as the icicle that's curdied by the frost Sha. 684 

— as unsunned snow ----- Sha. 955 
Chastity — Book iii. of Faery Queen - - Spe. 197 
Chateaubriand. Jeune fille et jeune fleur - Flo. 344 
Chatham, Clerk of, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 - Sha. 496 



Ckatillon 
Children's 



92 



Chatillon, an embassador, c. in King John - Sha. 
Chatsworth ! thy stately mansion - - - Wor. 
Chatterton, Thomas, Death of Col. 

Sonnet on - - - - - - - Ros. 

Sonnet to ------ Keats 

CHAUCER, GEOFFREY, Poems of : 



Adam. (Monkes Tale.) . 
Assembly of Foules, The . 
Balade sent to K. Richard 
Ballade of the Village 
Balthazar 

Canterbury Tales, The 
Chanounes Yemannes Tale 
Clerk of Oxenf ordes Prologe 
Clerkes Tale . 
Coses Tale .... 
Cokes Tale of Gamelyn . 
Covetise, Proverbes against 
Cresus. (Monkes Tale.) 
Cuckow and the Nightingale 
Doctor of Phisik, Tale of the 
Empty Purse, To his 
Foules, Assembly of . 
Frankeleynes Tale . 

Gamelin, The Cokes Tale of 
Gentilness— a ballad . 
Glossary to Chaucer 
Good Counsail of Chaucer . 
Julius Cesar. (Monkes Tale.) 
Knightes Tale 
L'Envoy de Chaucer 

A Bukton . 

Lucifer. (Monkes Tale.) 
Man of Lawes Tale 
Marchaundes Tale . 
Maunciples Tale . 
Melibeus, Tale of . 
Milleres Tale 



456 
578 
596 
597 
461 

19 
352 
232 
234 
125 
127 
602 
475 
571 
334 
601 
578 
309 
207 
127 
602 
605 
597 
474 

42 
600 
595 
456 
149 
261 
497 
414 

97 



Monkes Tale . . . . 
Myller, Prologe of the 
Negligence, Proverbes against 
Nero. (Monkes Tale.) 
Nightingale, Cuckow and the 
Nonne Prestes Tale . 
Pardoneres Tale 
Persones Tale . 
Plaintife to Fortune 
Prioresses Tale . 
Prologe to Melibeus 

— of the Chanouns Yeman 

— of the Frere .... 

— of the Myller . 

— of the Reeve 

— of the Wyf of Bathe 

— to Canterbury Tales . 
Proverbes against Covetise 
Reeves Tale .... 
Sampson. (Monkes Tale.) 
Schipmannes Tale . 
Scrivener, Unto his own 
Secounde Nonnes Tale . 
Sir Thopas, Tale of . 
Sompnoures Tale . 
Squyeres Tale 
Tale of Melibeus . 

— of Sir Thopas . 

— of the Doctor of Phisik 
Village without painting 
Virelai .... 
Wyf of Bathes Tale . 
Zenobia. (Monkes Tale.) 



Chaucer, Geoffrey — a sonnet - 

Daisy, The ----- 

Good counsail 

and Windsor - 

Selections from modernized - 

Tales from - 

Check every outflash — a sonnet - 
Cheerful mid desolation's sadness 
Cheerfulness taught by reason 
Chef Ragozzi, c. in Zapolya 
Cherubs, The - 

Chess-board, The - - - - 
Chester, Mr., Epitaph on 
Chevalier's lament— a song 
Cheviot ---.__ 
Chewing the food of sweet and bitter 
(Jhiabrera, Epitaphs translated from 
Chicago --.-__ 
— fair, Hymn for the 



Lon. 

- Flo. 
Fav. 

- Cam. 
Wor. 

" Dry. 
Ten. 

- Flo. 
Bro. 

- Col. 
Cam. 

- Mer. 
Cow. 

Burns 
Scott 

- Sha. 
Wor. 

- Whi. 

Hoi. 



332 

246 

47 

294 
250 



. 455 
95 



571 
478 
376 
505 
597 
400 
413 
342 
206 

95 
113 
175 

19 
602 
115 
456 
389 
603 
329 
406 
218 
291 
414 
406 
364 
597 
603 
197 
462 



365 

16 

324 

198 
470 
321 
483 
86 
87 
231 
260 
231 
494 
210 
460 
224 
486 
372 
253 



q q Chatillon 

^° Children's 

Chichely to Henry V.— a sonnet - - - Wor. 365 

Chief captain of Jehovah's host - - - Wes. 258 

— of organic numbers --■-.-- Keats 256 
Chieftains lead on ! our hearts beat high - Hem. 335 

— son, The -------- Hem. 324 

Child, Lydia Maria, To Whi. 353 

— Address to a ■- Wor. 80 

— amid the flowers at play - Hem. 361 

— and dove - Hem. 377 

— and hind ------- Cam. 295 

— and the autumn leaf. (Samuel Lover.) - Flo. 507 

— and the lily. (Bryant.) - - - - Flo. 73 

— asleep, The Bro. 289 ; Lon. 20 

— Characteristics of a \ /"or. 80 

— do not fear Pro. 188 

— embracing his mother, To a - - - - Hood 171 

— For a - Wes. 121 

— For a new-born ------ Wes. 112 

— In album of a Wor. 458 

— in the cradle Sch. 249 

— of God longing to see him. (Mme. Guyon.) Cow. 622 

— of loud-throated war | ------ - Wor. 257 

— of misfortune ! offspring of the muse - White 374 

— of Mrs. H. on his birthday - - - Hem. 374 

— of my parents ! sister of my soul ! - - Wor. 592 

— of grandmother Eve ----- Sha. 137 

— of the clouds ! — a sonnet - Wor. 327 

— of the country ! free as air - - - - Flo. 339 

— of the forests -,---- Hem. 381 

— of the Spring, thou charming flower - - Flo. 68 

— of the sun ! pursue thy rapturous Rog. 249 ; Fav. 344 

— Rowland to the dark tower - - - Sha. 865 

— songs Ten. 684; Whi. 391 

— tired of play," On a ----- Wil. 78 

— To a- - - - Lon. 82 

Childbirth, Thanksgiving after - - - Wor. 377 

Childe Harold's pilgrimage — a romaunt - Byron 277 

Childhood (anon.) ------ Flo. 333 

— White 236 

— and school-time— a prelude - - - Wor. 501 
Childish recollections ..-.-- Byron 161 

Childless father - Wor. 113 

Children - Lon. 224 

— of the Lord's supper Lon. 29 

— of the sun's first glancing. (Schiller.) - Flo. 521 

— Prayer for - - Cow. 66, 68 

Children's crusade— a fragment - - - Lon. 406 

— hospital, In the - Ten. 705 

— hour, The - - - - -Lon. 225; Fay. 380 

— mission, Anniversary hymn for - - Whi. 415 



Child's QJ_ 

Cicero °' ± 

Child's evening prayer Col. 164 

— funeral, The ------ Bry. 180 

— grave at Florence Bro. 149 

— impression of a star Wil. 81 

— last sleep Hem. 419 

— thought of God Bro. 69 

Chill and mirk is the mighty blast - - Byron 233 

— penury repressed their noble rage - - Fa v. 32 
Chillington grove of oaks — an inscription - Cow. 474 
Chillon, Prisoner of— a fable - Byron 82 

— Sonnet on ------ Byron 82 

Chimes ------ Lorn 408; Eos. 282 

Chinese embassy, Banquet to, 1868 - - Hoi. 257 

Chippewa legend, A ----- Low. 54 

Chiron, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

Chispa, a servant, c. in Spanish Student - Lon. 44 

Chiswick, Old gate at - Pope 389 

Chivalry, Love in age of - - - - - Bry. 148 

Chloris being ill, On — a song - Burns 283 

— Fragment of — a song - Burns 284 

— I swear by all I ever swore - Moore 80 

— Songs to ------ Burns 264 

Choice, The— three sonnets - Ros. 262 

Choose a firm cloud before it fall - Pope 232 

— the darkest part of the grove - Dry. 553 

— you this day ------- Hoi. 217 

Chords are touched by Apollo - Goe. 273 

— that vibrate sweetest pleasure - - Burns 139 
Chorus in an unpublished drama - - - Ten. 469 

— of angels. (Faust.) ----- G e. 392 

— of Eden spirits ------ Bro. 187 

— of spirits. (Faust.) - Goe. 393, 398 

— of the Fates - - Lon. 344 

— of youths and virgins Pope 356 

Choruses to tragedy of Brutus - - - Pope 355 

Chosen cliff, The— an antique - Goe. 270 

— one, To the— a song Goe. 43 

— tree, The— " Estelle " ----- Flo. 491 
Christ, Baptism of ----- Wil. 37 

— our righteousness - Wes. 358 

— stilling the tempest Hem. 375 

— the friend of sinners - Wes. 6 

— the Lord, is risen to-day - Wes. 64 

— to the young man said Lon. 135 

— whose glory fills the skies - Wes. 331 

Christabel Col. 119 

Christel— a song ------ Q. oe <>3 

Christening of a friend's child - Col. 90 

Christiad, The— a divine poem - - - White 399 

Christian friends, For - Wes. 31 



O k Child's 

*° Cicero 

• 

Christian friendship "Wes. 332 

— life, Vicissitudes of. (Mme. Guyon.) - - Cow. 636 

— love — an aphorism Lon. 94 

— slave, The Whi. 50 

— The Cow. 84 

— tourists, The Whi. 147 

Christianity in America Wor. 374 

Christina, To, queen of Sweden. (Milton.) - Cow. 572 

Christmas Her. 167 

— 1804 White 351 

— bells Lon. 319 

— box, The — a sonnet Goe. 219 

— carmen - Whi. 393 

— carol- - Col. 201; Hem. 428; Lon. 140; Pro. 396 

— day. (Charles Harvey.) - Flo. 304 

— day, For Wes. 61 

— flowers - - Pro. 381 

— gifts Bro. 353 

— hymn at St. Helena Island - Whi. 285 

— in 1875 -------- Bry. 343 

— tree. (Rev. C. T. Brooks.) - Flo. 307 
Christopher Sly, a tinker, c. in Taming the S. Sha. 229 
Christ's descent into hell - Goe. 263 

— entrance into Jerusalem - Wil. 39 
Chronicles, On passages in - - Wes. 166, 173, 278 
Chronological view of age of Dante - - Dante vii 
Chronos, chronos, mend thy pace - Dry. 543 
Chrysanthemums. (W. P. Palmer.) - - Flo. 287 
Chrysaor -------- Lon. 126 

Chuld Nameh. (Divan xii.) - Goe. 385 

Church and state — a fable - Moore 575 

— floor - - Her. 150 

— in 1849 - - Pro. 390 

— lock and key Her. 150 

— militant, The Her. 295 

— monuments Her. 148 

— music -------- Her. 149 

— of San Salvador Wor. 298 

— porch Her. 89 

— porch, The — a sonnet Ros. 300 

— rents and schisms Her. 237 

— The - Cra. 320 

— to be erected— a sonnet Wor. 379 

Churchill. Perfume of jasmine - Flo. 122 

Churchill's grave ----- Byron 262 

Churchyard among the mountains - - Wor. 661 

— at Cambridge, In the Lon. 214 

— Elegy written in. (Gray.) - - - Fav. 30 

— Sermon in a - Mac. 159 

Cicero, a senator, c. in Julius Caesar - - Sha. 764 



Cicons O a 

Close vo 

Cicons, Adventures of the ----- Odys. 121 

Cid, Songs of the - - - - - - Hem. 252 

Cid's battle-song - - Hem. 475 

— death-bed Hem. 253 

— departure into exile Hem. 252 

— funeral procession - - - - - Hem. 254 

— rising, The - -. Hem. 256 

Cinna, c. in Julius Csesar - Sha. 764 

— a poet, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 
Cinque Ports, Warden of the - Lon. 213 
Cintra, Convention of — a sonnet - Wor. 277 
Circe, Prologue to - - - - - - Dry. 485 

Circle of nature - Sen. 259 

Circles --------- Erne. 287 

Circumcision, On the Mil. 415 

Circumstance ------- Ten. 21 

— an epigram ------- She. 533 

Cisma D' ingalaterra. (From Calderon.) - She. 575 

Cistertian monastery — a sonnet - - - Wor. 363 

Cities of the plain - - - - - Whi. 86 

City and the sea - Lon. 407 

— child - Ten. 684 

— in the sea - Poe 86 

— lyric. (T. Westwood.) Flo. 466 

— pigeon, To a - Wil. 80 

— poems ---_--__ Wil. 185 
Civil and religious liberty - - - Wor. 373 
Civilization, Recipe for - - - - - Hood 520 

Claim, The - - Bro. 108 

Clanronald, Death of - - - - - - Hem. 335 

Clapham academy, Ode on - - - - Hood 449 

Clara Van Artevelde, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay . 30 

Clare, earl of , To - - - - - - Byron 174 

Clarence, Duke of (Thomas) , c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 Sha. 409 

— Duke of (George), c. in Richard hi. - - Sha. 556 

— Lady, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 
Clarendon had law and sense - - - Dry. 536 
Claribel— a melody - - - - - - Ten. 7 

Clarin, c. in Magico Prodigioso - - - She.' 537 

Clarinda, mistress of my soul - - - Burns 112 

— To - - - - - - - - Burns 112, 113 

— (Craig), Letters to - - - - - Burns 562 
Clarke, James Freeman, Birthday of - - Hoi. 144 

— Mr., Letter to - ----- Burns 510 

— J., Letter to ---.._ Burns 478 

— Samuel, Jr., Letter to - Burns 501 
Clarkson, it was an obstinate bill - - - ' Wor. 276 
Clasping of hands ---.._ Her. 256 
Class of 1829, Hymn for meeting in 1869 - Hoi. 227 

— of 1829, Meeting of 1875 ----- Hoi 235 



tf 



Cicons 
Close 



Class of 1829, Poems of Hoi. 207 

Classical Walpurgis-night - Faust 245, 414 

Claud Halcro and Noma. (Pirate.) - - Scott 434 

— Halcro'ssong " - - Scott 433 

— Halcro's verses - - Scott 437 
Claude's enchanted castle ----- - Keats 258 

Claudio, c. in Measure for Measure - - Sha. 67 

— c. in Much Ado about Nothing - - - Sha. Ill 
Claudis avarita satyram, statuisque - - Her. 576 
Claudius, a servant, c. in Julius Caesar - - Sha. 764 

— king of Denmark, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 

Cleansing fires Pro. 63 

Clear fount of light ! my native land - - Lon. 17 

— headed friend, whose joyful scorn - - Ten. 10 

— the brown path to meet his coulter's - Hoi. 97 

— the way. (Charles Mackay.) - - - Fav. 350 

— vision, The ------ - Whi. 331 

Clearly the blue river chimes - Ten. 467 

Cleaveland, Parker — a sonnet - - - Lon. 381 

Cleaving asunder, Sura of - - - P. of F. 93 

Cleghorn, Eobert, Letters to - - - Burns 361, 403 

Clelia -.---■ Cra. 414 

Clement, The - - - - m - - -P. of F. 78 

Clench thine eyes now, 'tis the last - - - Eos. 155 

Cleomenes, a lord, c. in Winter's Tale - - Sha. 304 

Cleon, a governor, c. in Pericles - - - Sha. 977 

Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, c. in Ant. and Cleo. Sha. 911 

Clerical friend, From a letter to Whi. 70 

— integrity — a sonnet - - - * - Wor. 373 

— oppressors - Whi. 49 

Clerk, Lines by a - - - - - - Hoi. 80 

— of Oxenfordes prologe ----- Cha. 232 
Clerkes tale, The ----- Cha. 234 
Clermont, Council of — a sonnet - - - Wor. 361 
Clevedon, Somersetshire, Composed at - Col. 56 
Cleveland's song. (Pirate.) - Scott 436 
Clifford, Lord, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - Sha. 496 

— son of foregoing, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 - Sha. 496 
Cliffs of Dover, The - - - - - Hem. 360 

Clifton Grove ------ White 281 

Clio. (Tears of the Muses.) - - - - Spe. 582 

Clitus, a servant, c. in Julius Caesar - - Sha. 764 

Clock, Motto for a - - - - - - Cow. 456 

Cloe, To ------- Moore 152 

Clorinda, Doleful lay of - - - - - Spe. 631 

Cloris and Fanny -----.- Moore 182 

Close be the threshold of a door - - - Cow. 412 

— beside the meeting waters. (E. H. W.) -Whi. 397 

— is he always to his faithful ones - P. of F. 115 

— of a course of lectures, k.t the - - - Hoi. 130 

7 



Close QQ 

Coleridge yo 

Close to the best known author Umbra sits - Pope 377 

— up his eyes and draw the curtain - - - Sha. 515 
Closed is the pink-eyed pimpernel - - Flo. 77 
Closer, The - - - - - - - P. of F. ■. 57 

Closing the sacred book which long - - Wor. 378 

Cloten, son of queen, c. in Cymbeline - - Sha. 944 

Cloud and wind — a sonnet - Ros. 248 

— confines, The - - - - - - - Eos. 291 

— on the way Bry. 250 

— The ------ - Mer. 191; She. 426 

— To a - - - Bry. 72 

Clouds, lingering vet, extend - ... Wor. 277 

— To the - -- - Wor. 208 

Clout the caldron," Remarks on - - - Burns 296 

Clover, Poetry of the - - - - - - Flo. 193 

Clown's reply. The ------ Gol. 137 

Clubs and social meetings - - - - - Cra. 378 

— cannot part them - Sha. 225 

— Description of various — an essay - - - Gol. 380 
Clutha, Cathlin of ----- Oss. 269 
Clyde, Frith of— Ansa Crag - Wor. 404 

Clytemnestra — a play Mer. 348 

Cobbler Keezars vision Whi. 270 

— of Hagenau, The - Lon. 277 

Cobweb, c. in Mids. Night's Dream - - - Sha. 161 

Cochituate celebration, For - Low. 96 

Cock and the fox - Dry. 383 

— fighter's garland ------ Cow. 466 

— up your beaver — a song - - - Burns 243 
Cockermouth, In sight of Wor. 398 
Cockledemoy, c. in Doom of Devorgoil - - Scott 524 

— my boy, my boy ------ Scott 553 

Cocoanut naught, fish too dear - - - Cow. 398 

Coeur de Lion at the bier of his father - - Hem. 138 

Coffee which makes the politician wise - - Pope 72 

Cohoes Falls, Written at - Moore 181 

Coke's tale, The ------- Qha. 125 

— tale of Gamelyn - Cha. 127 

Col- Anion of troubled streams - Oss. 239 

Cold and quiet - Ing. 463 

— beauty, To a - Hood 147 

— my dear, — cold and quiet - Ing. 463 
Coldly we spake — a sonnet - Wor. 360 
Cole, Father, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

— Thomas, Sonnet to - Bry. 127 

Coleorton Hall, Musings at - - - - Wor. 494 

— Inscription in grounds of Wor. 465 
Coleridge, Hartley. Anemone - - - Flo. 499 
Gold fishes - Flo. 382 



99 



Close 
Coleridge 



COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR, Poems of: 



Absence— a farewell ode . . 35 
Alienated Mistress, The . . 218 
Ancient Mariner. Rime of the . 101 
Answer to a Child's Question . 164 
Author, To the, of poems publish- 
ed anonymously at Bristol 52 
Autumnal Evening, An . . .36 

— Moon, To the— a sonnet . . 98 
Ballad of the Dark Ladie . . 119 
Beautiful Spring, To a . . 35 
Berengarius, On the last words of 216 
Blossom. On observing a . . 60 
Bloasoming of Solitary Date-tree . 220 
Brockley-Coomb, While climbing 96 
Burke. Edmund, Sonnet to . . 93 
Cain, Wanderings of . . . 226 
Chamouni, Yale of, Hymn in . 168 
Characters: Adelaide. (Fall of 

Robespierre.) . . . 382 

— Alhadra, wife of Isidore. (Re- 

morse.) 310 

— Alvar. Don. (Remorse.) . 310 

— Baptisia Seni, astrologer. 

(Piccolomini.) . . . 407 

— Barrere. ( Fall of Robespierre. ) 382 

— Bethlen Bathory, a prince. 

(Zapolya.) .... 250 

— Billaud Varennes. (Fall of 

Robespierre.) . . .382 

— Bourdon L'Oise. (Fall of Ro- 

bespierre.) .... 382 

— Butler, an Irishman. (Picco- 

lomini.) .... 407 

— Casimir, son of Kiuprili. (Za- 

polya.) .... 230 

— Chef Ragozzi, a commander. 

(Zapolya.) .... 231 

— Collot D'Herbois. (Fall of Ro- 

bespierre.) .... 382 

— Couthon. (Fall of Robespierre.) 382 

— Donna Teresa, an orphan. 

(Remorse.) .... 310 

— Dubois Crance. (Fall of Ro- 

bespierre.) .... 400 

— Emerick, King of Illyria. (Za- 

polya.) . . . .230 

— Friedland, Duchess of. (Picco- 

lomini.) .... 407 

— Glycine, dtr. of Ragozzi. (Za- 

polya.) . . .250 

— Goetz, a general. (Piccolom- 

ini.) 407 

— Rio. a field-marshal. (Picco- 

lomini.) .... 407 

— Isidore, a Moresco chieftain. 

(Remorse.) .... 310 

— Isolani, a general. (Piccolom- 



ini.) 

— Kolatto, a general. (Piccolom- 

ini.) 

— Laska, steward. (Zapolya.) 

— Lecointre. (Fall of Robes 

pierre.) .... 

— Legendre. (Fall of Robes- 

pierre.) .... 

— Maradas, Don, a general. (Pic- 

colomini.) .... 

— Max Piccolomini, a colonel. 

(Piccolomini.) . 



407 



407 
250 



*K 



Characters : Monviedro, a domini- 

can. (Remorse.) . . 310 

— Naomi. (Remorse.) . . .310 

— Neumann, captain of cavalry. 

(Piccolomini.) . . . 407 

— Octavio Piccolomini, a general. 

(Piccolomini.) . . . 407 

— Old Bathory, a mountaineer. 

(Zapolya.) .... 250 

— Ordonio, Don. (Remorse.) . 310 

— Pestalutz, an assassin. (Za- 

polya.) .... 250 

— Questenberg, commissioner. 

(Piccolomini.) . . . 407 

— Raab Kiuprili, a chieftain. 

(Zapolya.) .... 230 

— Robespierre. (Fall of Robes- 

pierre.) .... 382 

— Saint Just. (Fall of Robes- 

pierre.) .... 382 

— Sandoval. (Night-Scene.) . 156 

— Sarolta. Lady, wif e of Casimir. 

(Zapolya.) . . . . 250 

— Tallien. (Fall of Robespierre.) 382 

— Tertsky, Count. (Piccolomini.) 407 

— Thekla, a princess. (Picco- 

lomini.) 407 

— Tiefenbacn, a general. (Picco- 

lomini.) 407 

— Valdez, Marquis. (Remorse.) 310 

— Von Questenberg. commission- 

er. (Piccolomini.) . . 407 

— "Wallenstein, duke of Friedland. 

(Piccolomini.) . . . 407 

— Wrangel, General, an envoy. 

(Piccolomini.) . . . 407 

— Zapolva, queen of Illyria. (Za- 

polya.) .... 230 

— Zulimez, an attendant. (Re- 

morse.) .... 310 
Chatterton, Thomas, On Death of 47 
Child's Evening Prayer . . 164 

Christabel 119 

Christening of a Friend's Child . 90 
Christmas Carol, A ... 201 
Cievedon, Somersetshire, Com- 
posed at 56 

Coleridge, Samuel T., Life of . 7 
Complaint of Ninathoma . .41 
Concert-room, Composed in a . 159 
Connubial Rupture in High Life . 89 
Constancy to an Ideal Object . 219 
Couplet written in a book . . 100 
Date-tree, Blossoming of Solitary 220 

Day-dream, A 214 

Dedication to George Coleridge 27 
Dejection — an ode .... 191 
Departing Year, Ode to . . 132 
Destiny of Nations, The— a vision 74 
Devil's Thoughts, The . . 217 
Discovery made too late— a sonnet 92 
Domestic Peace . . . . 44 
Duty surviving Self-love . .211 
Elbingerode. In an album at . 170 
Elegy — imitated from Akenside . 204 
Epitaph on an Infant . . 43, 199 
Erskine, To— a sonnet . . .95 
Fall of Robespierre— a play . 382 
Fancy in Nubibus .... 222 



Coleridge 

Come 



100 



Fire. Famine and Slaughter . 145 
Foster Mother's Tale, The . . 87 
France— an ode .... 130 
Friend. Lines on a . . . .46 

— To a 45, 55, 175 

— To a — a sonnet . . . .99 
Frost at Midnight . . .. 182 
Genevieve— a sonnet . . .34 
Georgiana, Ode to 195 
Happy Husband, The . . . 165 

Home-sick 163 

Hour when we shall meet again . 61 
Human Life, on denial of immor- 
tality 203 

Hymn before sunrise in Cha- 

mouni 168 

Infant, Epitaph on an . . 43 

— To an . . . . . .43 

Inscription for fountain on a 

heath 171 

— upon a memorial tablet . 21 
Journey Homeward, On a— a 

sonnet 98 

Keepsake, The . . . .160 
King's Arms. Ross, Written at the 44 
Kinnaird, Adam S., To— a letter . 19 

Kisses 32 

Kubla Khan, or a vision in a 

Dream .... 207 
Lady, To an offended . . .215 

— To a. with Falconer's "Ship- 

wreck" 161 

Lafayette, Marquis de, Sonnet 

to 96 

Lewti, or Circassian Love-Chaunt 150 
Lime-tree Bower, This . . .173 
Lloyd, C, To . . . . 61 
Love 147 

— Poems 147 

— Recollections of . . . .166 
Meditative Poems . . . 168 
Melancholy— a fragment . . 199 
Mercy, To— a sonnet ... 94 
Monody on Death of Chatterton . 47 
My heart has thanked thee, 

Bowles 91 

Xight-scene, The . . .156 
Nightingale, The . . . .179 

— To the 50 

Ninathoma, Complaint of . .41 
Ode to Departing Year . . 132 
Odes and Poems . . . .191 
Ossian, Imitated from . . 40 

?tter. River, To the— a sonnet . 92 
ains of Sleep, The ... 209 
Pale Roamer thro' the night— a 

sonnet T3 

Pang more sharp than all . . 205 
Pensive at eve— a sonnet . . 99 
Phantom or Fact? .... 212 
Piccolomini, The— a play . 407, 557 
Picture, The, or the Lover's Res- 



olution .... 
Piteous Sobs that choke— a son- 
net 

Pixies, Songs of the 
Plays: Fall of Robespierre 

— Piccolomini, The 

— Remorse— a tragedy 

— Wallenstein, Death of— a trag- 

edy 



1.V2 



55? 



Play: Zapolya . . . .230 
Priestley, Joseph, To — a sonnet 94 
Prose in Rhyme . . . .211 
Raven, The— a Christmas tale . 86 
Recollections of Love . . .166 
Reflections on leaving a place of 

retirement .... 58 
Religious Musings ... 63 
Remorse— a tragedy . . . 310 
Revisiting the Sea-shore, On . 167 
Rime of the Ancient Mariner . 101 
River Otter, To the— a sonnet . 92 

Rose, The 32 

Sara Coleridge. To . . 33, 53 

Schiller, John C. F. von, To— a 

sonnet . . . . 97 
Sheridan, Richard B., To — a son- 
net 95 

Sibylline Leaves .... 132 
Siddons, Mrs.. Sonnet to . . 96 

Sigh, The 34 

Simplicity, Sonnet to . . . 100 
Sleep, Pains of .... 209 
Solitude. Tears in ... 139 
Something childish but very nat- 
ural 163 

Sonnets: Autumnal Moon, To the 98 

— Brockley-Coomb, While climb- 

ing 96 

— Burke, Edmund, To . . 93 

— Discovery made too late . . 92 

— Erskine, To .... 95 

— Friend, To a . . . .99 

— Genevieve 34 

— Journey homeward, On a . .98 

— Lafayette, Marquis de . . 96 

— Mercy, To 94 

— My heart has thanked thee, 

Bowles! 91 

— Pale Roamer through the 

Night 93 

— Pensive at eve .... 99 

— Piteous sobs that choke . . 99 

— Priestlev. Joseph, To . . 94 

— River Otter, To the . . . 92 

— Schiller, John C. F. von, To . 97 

— Sheridan. Richard B., To . . 95 

— Siddons, Mrs., To . . . 96 

— Simplicity, To . . . .100 

— Stanhope, Earl, To 97 

— Sweet Mercy! .... 93 

— Thou gentle look ... 92 
Spenser, Edmund, In the manner 

of . ■ 51 

Stanhope, Earl, Sonnet to . . 97 
Suicide's Argument, To . . 220 
Sweet Mercy!— a sonnet . . 93 
Tears in Solitude . . .139 
Tell, William, Birth-place of . 200 
This Lime-tree Bower, my Prison 173 
Thou bleedest, my poor heart— a 

sonnet 92 

— gentle look— a sonnet . . 92 
Three graves, The ... 184 
Time, Real and Imaginary . . 87 

— The— an autumnal evening . 36 
Tombless Epitaph. A . . . 172 
Tranquillity, Ode to . . . 197 
Two Founts, The . . . .223 
Unfortunate Woman, To an . 59 
at the Theater. To an . . 158 



iai Coleridge 

JA'l n nmo 



Come 



Welsh, Imitated from the . . 41 
Wordsworth, William, To . . 176 
Work without Hope . . .213 
Young Ass, To a . . . . 42 

— Lady, To a, on recovery from 

fever 162 

To a. with a poem . . 39 

— Man of Fortune. To a . . 198 
Youth and Age . . . .213 
Zapolya— a dramatic poem . 230 



Usurper's Fate, The— a sequel . 250 

— Fortune, The— a prelude . . 230 
Virgin's Cradle-hymn . . 199 
Visionary Hope, The . . . 165 
Visit of the gods, The . . 203 
W. L., Lines to . . . .198 
Walk before Supper, After a . 89 
Wallenstein, Death of— a trage- 
dy 557 

Wanderings of Cain . . . 226 

Coleridge, S. T., Life of - Col. 7 

Lily, The Flo. 75 

On observing a blossom - - - Flo. 463 

Sonnet to - - Hood 54; Eos. 295 

To - - She. 394 

Work without hope ----- Flo. 514 

Coleville, Sir John, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - Sha. 409 

Colin Clout's come home again - - - Spe. 617 

— I see, by thy new taken task - - - Spe. 24 

— my dear, when shall it please thee - - Spe. 558 

— well fits thy sad cheer - Spe. 636 

Coliseum, The Poe 70 

Coll 1 Alto Eog. 35 

Collar, The Her. 252 

College breakfast-party ----- Eliot 106 

— examination, Suggested by - - - Byron 153 

— poems -------- Wil. 97 

Collier's bonny lassie," Eemarks on - Burns 307 

Collin, W. Ode to evening - Flo. 372 

— Wilkie, Toast to - - - - - - Hoi. 263 

— Eemembrance of - - - - - - Wor. 21 

Collot d'Herbois, c. in Fall of Eobespierre - Col. 382 

Colna-Dona ------- Oss. 239 

Cologne cathedral — a sonnet - Wor. 294 

Colonists for New Zealand - Cam. 308 

Colon na, Prince, c. in The Cenci - - - She. 268 

Colors seen by candle-light - - - - Bro. 287 

Colossians, chap, iii., verse 3, Lines on - - Her. 172 

Colubriad, The - - Cow. 412 

Columbus - - - -Low. 56; Sch. 225; Ten. 711 

— Voyage of ------ Eog. 295 

Comala — a dramatic poem ----- Oss. 203 

Combat, The - - Scott 142 

Come all ye true hearts - White 376 

— all ye virgins fair, in kirtles white - - Flo. 398 

— Anna — a pastoral ----- White 335 

— as the winds come, when forests - - Scott 401 

— away, come away, death ... - Sha. 289 

— away, make no delay - Her. 290 

— away, the clouds are high - - - Ing. 439 

— back to your mother, ye children - - Hoi. 35 

— be happy — sit by me She. 412 

— blue-eyed maid of heaven - Byron 290 



Come 
Coming 



102 



Come boat me o'er to Charlie — a song - Burns 217 

— breathe thou soft, or blow thou bold - Mer. 210 

— bring thy gift. If blessings were as slow - Her. 245 

— chase that starting tear away - - - Moore 528 

— come, said Tom's father, at your time - Moore 645 

— dear Amanda, quit the town - - - Tho. 466 

— dear old comrade, you and I Hoi. 207 

— disappointment, come -'■.-.-'..- White 37 

— divine Emmanuel, come - - " - - We's. 17 

— down, O maid, from yonder mountain - Ten. 173 

— Father, Son, and Holy Ghost - - - Wes. 250 

— fill a fresh bumper for why should we go Hoi. 176 

— fill the South Sea goblet full - Pope 399 

— fly to these arms, nor let beauties - - Moore 332 

— forth ! my cat-bird calls to me - - - Low. 375 

— forth, ye nymphs, come forth - - - Spe. 633 

— from the woods with the citron-flowers - Hem. 155 

— from thy caverns dark and deep - - Lon. 349 

— f ye, let us a' to the wedding - - - Burns 309 

— gentle air ! th' seolian shepherd - - Pope 443 

— gentle god of soft desire ... - Tho. 468 

— gentle Spring, ethereal mildness, come - Tho. 8 

— gentle Spring, ethereal mildness, come ! " - Hood 359 

— gentle Venus, and assuage - - - Tho. 459 

— gies a sang, Montgomery - - - Burns 334 

— hither all sweet maidens soberly - - Keats 247 

— hither, Evan Cameron ----- Ayt. 29 

— hither, my sweet Kosalind - - - She. 189 

— home !-------. Hem. 237 

— if you dare, our trumpets sound - - Dry. 556 

— into the garden, Maud ----- Ten. 232 

— let me take thee — a song - Burns 256 

— let us go to the land. (B. W. Procter.) - Flo. 409 

— let us join our friends above - - - Wes. 374 

— let us plant the apple-tree - Bry. 222 

— let us set our careful breasts - - - Hood 160 

— listen to another song - - - - - Ayt. 156 

— listen to my story while - Moore 532 

— look at this plant, with its narrow - - Flo. 482 

— Lord, my heart doth bairn - - - Her. 198 

— Lacy, while 'tis morning hour - - - Scott 232 

— maids and matrons, to caress - - - Cam. 295 

— Mav, with all thy flowers - - - Moore 656 

— melancholy moralizer, come - - - Flo. 318 

— my crony, let's think upon far-away days - Hood 557 

— my way, my truth, my life - - - Her. 256 

— near ere yet the dust Hem. 148 

— near your beauty with my nails - - Sha. 501 

— not, Lord ------ Moore 344 

— not when I am dead Ten. 118 



103 



Come 
Coming 



Come not within the measure of my wratn - Sha. 40 

— O, thou traveler unknown ... Wes. 334 

— o'er the sea - - - - - - Moore 248 

— old friend, sit down and listen - - - Lon. 89 

— out and hear the waters shoot - - - Ing. 258 

— out, love, the night is enchanting - - Wil. 185 

— peace of mind, delightful guest - - - Cow. 415 

— pensive sage, who lovest to dwell - - White 326 

— ponder well, for 'tis no jest - - - - Cow. 453 

— rede me, dame — a song - - - - Burns 227 

— rest in this bosom Moore 252 

— rest in this bosom. (Moore.) - - - Poe 38 

— send round the wine - Moore 224 

— spread your wings as I spread mine - Hoi. 127 

— take the harp — 'tis vain to muse - - Moore 193 

— take our boy, and we will go - Bry. 85 

— tell me, says Rosa, as kissing - - Moore 90 

— tell me where the maid is found - - Moore 108 

— the three corners of the world ... Sha. 355 

— thou beam that art lonely - Oss. 269 

— thou awakener of the spirit's ocean - - She. 508 

— thou long-expected Jesus - - - . - Wes. 59 

— thou universal blessing Wes. 237 

— to me, not as once thou earnest - - Mer. 468 

— to me, O ye children ! Lon. 224 

— to the dance with me, fair one - Goe. 28 
— -- to our fete, and bring with thee - - Moore 315 

— unto these yellow sands -.»..-- Sha. 5 

— up the broad river, the Thames, my Dane - Ing. 165 

— when no graver cares employ - - - Ten. 251 

— while in freshness and dew it lies - - Hem. 346 

— with me and we will blow - Moore 635 

— with me to the mountain -.-.-- Eliot 25 

— Y-rm-th, my boy, never trouble - - Moore 328 

— ye disconsolate - - - - .. - Moore 348 

— ye hither all whose taste - Her. 283 

— ye — who, if (which heaven avert) - - Wor. 274 
Comedies. See Plays. 

Comedy of Errors — a play -'.-"".-..* Sha. 93 

Comet, Address to the (anon.) - - - Fav. 135 

— The Hoi. 9 

Comfort Pro. 187 

— a sonnet -------- Bro. 83 

— in tears — a song. - Goe. 56 

— in the night — a sonnet Ing. 460 

Comforter, A - Pro. 294 

Comin' through the craigs. (Jean Glover.) Burns 337 

Coming of Arthur, The Ten. 397 

— through the braes — a song - - - Burns 276 
*~ through the rye— a song - Burns 278 



.oming im 

Constancy j-wt: 

Coming to kiss her lips, (such grace I found) - Spe. 698 

Connnius, c. in. Coriolanus - Sha. 654 

Commemoration services, For, 1865 - - Hoi. 266 

Commerce has set the mark of selfishness - She. 43 

Commencement of the new century - - Sch. 288 

Commination service— a sonnet - - - Wor. 377 

Common fate ------- Sch. 261 

— lot, The. (James Montgomery.) - - Fav. 81 

— lot. The, Answer to - Byron 166 

— question, The Whi. 322 

— sense and genius ----- Moore 526 
Commonplace-book begun April, 1783 - . - Burns 579 
Communion, Holy Her. 134 

— of saints, The Wes. 373 

— table, Welcome to Cow. 70 

Como, Lake of Rog. 28 ; Lon. 359 

Companion ! by whose buoyant spirit - - Wor. 307 

Company, villainous company - Sha. 399 

Comparatio inter munus sum mi - - - Her. 588 

Comparison, A ------ - Cow. 44 

Comparisons are odorous - Sha. 124 

Compassion — pity — pride can do without - Wor. 67 

Compassionate, The - - - - -P. of F. 17 

Compensation - Erne. 77, 229 ; Mer. 236 

— a sonnet Ing. 438 

Complacent fictions were they - Wor. 313 

Complain not of me, child of clay - - Scott 427 

Complaining Her. 241 

Complaint, A - Wor. 106 

— of an Indian woman - - - - - Wor. 108 

— of Ninathona ------ Col. 41 

— on the miseries of life Tho. 446 

Complaints ------- gp 8i 555 

Composition, Philosophy of— an essay - - Poe 171 

Comrades, leave me here a little - - - Ten. 89 

Comus --------- Mil. 432 

Concealed within the shady wood - - Moore 120 

Concert room, Composed in a - - - - Col. 159 

Concluding song of dawn - Ing. 270 

Concord battle-ground, Graves on - - - Low. 97 

— centenary ode, 1875 ----- Low. 407 

Concord hymn Erne. 139 

Condemn the fa ait and not the actor - - Sha. 73 

Condemned criminals, For - Wes. 139 

— into everlasting redemption - Sha. 128 

— ones - - Mer. 200 

Condolatory address ----- Byron 257 

Conductor Bradley Whi. 390 

Conference with Menalaus - - - Odys. 47 

Confession Her! 214 



i ax Coming 

- tvyc ' Constancy- 
Confession, Psalm of Mer. 294 

Confessional, The Wil. 252 

Confessions - Bro. 361 

Confidant, The ------ Oa. 157 

Confido et conquiesco ----- p ro . 388 

Confined to school, On being - - - - White 13 

Confirmation — a sonnet ----- Wor. 376 

Conflict of wit and beauty - G-oe. 241 

— The -------- - Sch. 78 

Confucius, Proverbs of Sch. 244 

Confusion now hath made his masterpiece - Sha. 795 

Congratulations — a sonnet - Wor. 379 

Congress, To the thirty-ninth - Whi. 317 

Congreve, Mr., To - - - - - - Dry. 281 

Coningsby, lord, Epitaph on - - - Pope 349 

Conjectures — a sonnet ----- Wor. 354 

Conjunction of Jupiter and Venus - - - Bry. Ill 

Conlath and Cuthona ----- Oss. 479 

Connecting medium, The ----- Sch. 262 

Connubial rupture in high life - - - Col. 89 

Conqueror worm, The Poe 82 

Conqueror's grave ------ Bry. 220 

— sleep, The ------- Hem. 342 

Conquest of Finland, The Whi. 213 

— of Granada, Epilogue to - - Drv. 513 

— The. (Agnes.) ------ Hoi. 92 

Conrad, c. in Otho the Great - - - Keats 333 

— page of honor, c. in House of Aspen - Scott 562 
Conrade, c. in Much Ado about Nothing - - Sha. Ill 
Conradin, Death of - - - - - - Hem. 119 

Conscience* - - Her. 196 

— does make cowards of us all - - - Sha. 826 

— For a tender ------- Wes. 363 

— New forcers of ----- - Mil. 470 

— say I, you counsel well ----- Sha. 186 

— Struggles of - - - - - - - Cra. 136 

Consecrated spot, The Goe. 270 

Consider the sea's listless chime - Ros. 152 

— them that serve - - - - - P. of F. 113 

Consideration like an angel came - - - Sha. 440 

Consolation — a sonnet - - - Bro. 81 ; Lon. 338 

Constable, lady W. M., Letters to - - Burns 445, 461 

Contadina, The ------ Hem. 384 

Constance, c. in King John - Sha. 332 

— sister to Eribert, c. in Vespers of Palermo Hem. 493 
Constancy Her. 157; Flo. 150 

— in change — a song Goe. 86 

— For - - - Wes. 318 

— Legend of Spe. 499 

— to an ideal object ------ Col. 219 



Constantia 1 AA 

Council iU0 

Constantia, To ----- She. 502 

— singing, To ------ - She. 405 

Constantine Kanaris, Epitaph of - - - Ayt. 199 

Constellations, The ------ Brv. 265 

Consulting secret with the blue-eyed maid - Odys. 264 

Consumption — a sonnet ----- Brv. 54 

— Sonnet to ------- White 348 

Contemplate, when the sun declines - - Cow. 611 

Contemplation ------- Wil. 71 

— To ------- White 326 

— Work and — a sonnet ----- Bro. 86 
Content - - - - Her. 152 

— if hence the unlearned their wants - - Pope 61 

— thee, greedy heart ! ----- Her. 234 

Contented wi' little — a song - Burns 268 

Contention of Achilles and Agamemnon - Iliad 49 

Contentment - - - Cow. 64; Hoi. 170; Tho. 472 

Contraband- ------- Mer. 460 

Contrast, A - - - - - Low. 76 ; Pro. 326 

— The - -Wor. 151 

Contrasted songs ------ Ing. 348 

Contrite heart Cow. 57 

Convent in the Apennines - Wor. 319 

— of Camaldoli — a sonnet ----- Wor. 319 

— The. (Marmion.) ----- Scott 56 
Convention of Cintra — a sonnet - - - Wor. 277 
Conversation ------- Cow. 200 

Conversion— a sonnet Wor. 357 

Convert, The- - - - - Cra. 188; Goe. 25 

Convey, the wise call it Sha. 45 

Conveyancing Hood 582 

Convulsion and peril. In times of - - Wes. 77 

Cook, Eliza. Bay. The - - - - - Flo. 153 

Building on the sand - Flo. 234 

Buttercups - Flo. 52 

Going-a-Maying ----- Flo. 57 

Holly. The Flo. 204 

Moorland blossoms - Flo. 171 

Song for the season ----- Flo. 509 

Cool shades and dews ----- Bry. 115 

Cooped in their winged sea-girt citadel - Byron 293 

Cooper of Cuddie— a song - Burns 275 

Cope sent a challenge from Dunbar - Burns 329 

Coplas de Manrique ----- Lon. 11 

Coptic songs Goe. 90 

Coquette, Three sonnets to a - Ten. 391 

Cora Linn. Composed at Wor 266 

— — or falls of the Clyde - Cam. 311 

Corbet, Mrs., Epitaph on Pope 345 

Cordelia -------- Mer. 281 



mConstantia 
Council 

Cordelia, dtr. of Lear, c. in King Lear - - Sha. 847 

— To - Mer. 283, 285 

— To — a sonnet ------- Wor. 411 

Corin, a shepherd, c. in As You Like It - Sha. 205 

Corinna, To, to go a-Maying. (Herrick.) - Flo. 455 

Corinth, Bride of — a ballad - Goe. 135 

— Siege of ------ Byron 64 

Corinthians, On passages in - - Wes. 167, 228, 303 

Coriolanus — a play - - - - - . - Sha. 654 

Corn and catholics - - - - Moore 640 

— flower, Poesy of the ----- Flo. 186 

— rigs are bonny, Remarks on Burns 314 

— song, The - -.'.,- - - - - Whi. 117 
Cornarus — Temperance and sobriety - - Her. 419 
Cornelius, a courtier, c. in Hamlet - - - Sha. 811 

— a physician, c. in Cymbeline - - - Lha. 944 
Cornwall, Duke of, c. in King Lear - - Sha. 847 

— Barry " (pseud.). See Procter, Bryan W. 
Coronach. (Lady of the Lake.) - - -Scott 130 
Coronation of Inez de Castro - - - Hem. 210 
Corpses are cold in the tomb - She. 414 
Correspondence. See Letters. 

Correspondents, Address to White 28 

Corruption — an epistle Moore 276 

— wins not more than honesty - - - Sha. 612 
Corruptions of the higher clergy - - - Wor. 366 
Corsair, The ------ Byron 28 

Cosmopolite, The. (Hermann and Dorothea.) Goe. 319 

Costanza ------- Hem. 192 

Costard, a clown, c. in Love's Labor's Lost Sha. 135 

Cottage in a chine ------ i n g. 134 

Cottager and his landlord. (Milton.) - - Cow. 572 

— to her infant - Wor. 112 

Cotter's Saturday night - - - Burns 50 ; Fav. 91 

Cottington, Lord, c. in Charles the First - She. 484 

Cotton and corn ------- Moore 636 

Coucy, Lord of, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - Tay. 232 

Could aught of song declare my pains - Burns 260 

— Homer come himself, distressed - - - Cow. 486 

— I command rough rhymes, and hoarse - Dante 110 

— I come near your beauty - Sha. 501 

— I from heaven inspired, as sure - - Cow. 442 

— I from this valley drear - Sch. 107 

— I outwear my present state - - - Ten. 471 

— I remount the river of my years - - Byron 263 

— Juno's self more sovereign - - - Eos. 243 

— this early bliss but rest ... - Goe. 86 

— ye come back to me, Douglas - - - Fav. 402 
Could'st thou look as dear as when - - Moore 653 
Council of Clermont — a sonnet - - - Wor. 361 



Council 1 Afi 

Cowper iUO 

Council of Ithaca -Odys. 21 

Counsel, Sura of - - - - - P. of F. 76 

Count me on the summer trees - - Moore 27 

— not thy life by calendars - - - - Fav. 68 

— of Greiers, The Bry. 152 

— ofHapsburgh ------ Sen. 180 

— Rinaldo Einaldi - Mer. 207 

Counter and Clubb were men in trade - Cra. 181 

Countess' pillar— a sonnet - - - Wor. 389 

— The Whi. 275 

Country lassie — a song - Burns 239 

— lassie (anon.) ' - Fav. 299 

— and patriotism. (P.J.Bailey.) - - - Fav. 62 

— clergyman's trip to Cambridge - - Mac. 184 

— dance and quadrille - - - Moore 604 

— For one retired in the Wes. 88 

— laird, Epitaph on a - - - - Burns 185 

— life, On a Tho. 384 

— parson, The ------- Her. 311 

— schoolmaster Goe. 243 

— squire, Epigrams on a henpecked - Burns 186 

County Guy Scott 444 

Couplet written in a book Col. 100 

Courage — an epigram Goe. 225 

— Exhortation to. (Shakespeare.) - - - Fav. 61 

— he said, and pointed toward - - - Ten. 46 

— mounteth with occasion - Sha. 335 
Course of true love never did run smooth - Sha. 162 
Court, a soldier, c. in Henry v. - - - Sha. 439 

— lady, A - Bro. 358 

— The. (Marmion.) ------ Scott 62 

Courtenay, earl of Devon, c. in Queen Mary Ten. 537 

Courtesy — book vi. of Faery Queen - - Spe. 429 

Courtin', The. (Biglow Papers.) - - - Low. 229 

Courtship of Miles Standish - Lon. 191 

Couthon, c. in Fall of Robespierre - - Col. 382 

Covenant, The ------- Cow. 60 

Covenanters, Persecution of the - - - Wor. 373 

Coventry, Thomas, Letter to - - - - Her. 503 

Cover thy spacious heavens, Zeus - - Goe. 177 

Covetousness, Proverbs against - - - Cha. 602 

Cow, Sura of the - - - - - P. of F. 106, 112 

Cowards die many times before - - - Sha. 772 

Cowley, Abraham, Imitation of - - - Pope 444 

Sweet-william ------ Flo. 167 

Cowper, Ashley, Memorial of - Cow. 446 

— Henry, Sonnet to ----- Cow. 454 

— had sinned with some excuse - - " Cow. 487 

— whose silver voice, tasked sometime** - Cow. 456 



109 



Council 
Cowper 



COWPER, WILLIAM, Poems of 

. 497 
Love 



627 

535 

459 

75 

449 

487 

558 



Abbott's portrait, On . 
Acquiescence of Pure 

(Mme. Guyon.) 
iEneid, Translations from . 
Afflicted Protestant Lady, To an 
Afflictions sanctified . 
Africans, Pity for Poor . 
Album, In an 
Andrewes, Lancelot, On death of 

(Milton.) .... 
Annus Memorabilis, 1789 . . 463 
Answer to stanzas to Lady Hes- 

keth 506 

Anti-Thelypthora ... 97 

Apollo, Ode to 429 

Aretimias, Epitaph on . .515 
Aristotle, Platonic ideas of . . 578 
As on a hill-top rude— a sonnet 596 
Aspirations of the soul after God. 

(Mme. Guyon.) ... 623 
Astrologers, Epitaph on the . 
Austen, Dr., Sonnet to 

— Lady, Epistle to . 

in rainy weather 

A varus and Plutus. (Fable of 

Gay.) 

Baroni, Leonora, To 

Bath, Epigram on a . 

Battered Beauty, Epigram on a . 

Beau, On a Spaniel called . 

Beau's reply 503 

Bill of Mortality, For the yearly 4 

Boadicea— an ode .... 

Bodham, Anne, To my cousin . 

Bourne, Vincent, the Thracian . 

Bull, Rev. Wm., To . . . 

Butterfly and Snail. (Fable of 

Gay.) 649 

C. P., In a letter to . ... 40 

Cambridge University bedel, 

Death of 557 

Cantab, The 609 

Canzone .... 

Card, A. " Poor Vestris ' ' 

Castaway, The . 

Cat, Retired . 

Catharina .... 

Cause won, The 

Centenarian, On death of a 

Certainty of Death 

Charity 184 

Chester, Mr., Epitaph on . . 494 

Child of God longing to see Him. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . .622 

Children, Prayer for . . 66, 68 

Chillington Grove of Oaks, In- 
scription for . . . 474 

Christian, The 84 

— Life, Vicissitudes of. (Mme. 

Guyon.) 633 

Christina, Queen of Sweden, To. 

(Milton.) 572 

Clock, Motto for a . . . 456 
Cock-fighter's Garland, The . 466 
Colubriad. The . . . .412 
Communion-table, Welcome to 

the 70 

Comparison, A .... 44 
Contentment 64 



Contrite Heart, The ... 57 
Conversation 200 



454 
5 

26 



516 
488 
401 
403 

648 
571 
517 
521 
503 



432 



599 
407 



597 
398 
509 
484 
490 
605 
604 
44 



Cottager and his Landlord 

Covenant, The 

Cowper, Ashley, Memorial of 

— Henry, Sonnet to 

— William, Memoir of 

Poem on himself . 

Creuze, Miss, To, on her birthday 439 
Cross, Joy of the. (Mme. Guyon.) Oil 
Cupid, Teaching of, by Moschus 523 
Damon. On death of. (Milton.) . 586 
Darwin, Dr. Erasmus, To . .489 
Death, Certainty of . . .44 

— of a minister .... 72 
Delia, After leaving her at New 

Burns 32 

— Appeal to, for Forgiveness . 30 

— Apologies to .... 27 

— Despair at separation from . 34 

— On her trying to hide grief . 33 

— To 31, 37 

Delia's Absence .... 32 
Denner"s Old Woman . . .607 

Dependence 92 

Diodati, Charles, Elegies to 554, 566 

Sonnet to .... 597 

Disappointment .... 38 
Distressed Travelers, The . . 417 
Diverting History of John Gilpin 240 
Divine Adoption, Testimony of. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . .625 

— Justice Amiable. (Mme. Guyon) 620 

— Love endures no Rival. (Mme. 

Guyon.) .... 626 

Procedure of. (Mme.Guyon.)618 

Secrets of. (Mme. Guyon.) . 633 

Dog and the Water-lily . . 455 

Doves, The 392 

Dryden's epigram on Milton . 599 
Ely, Bishop of, On Death of . 574 
Enamored, artless, young, . . 598 

Enigma. An 601 

Entire Surrender, The. (Mme. 

Guyon.) 631 

Envy, On 522 

Ephraim, Repenting . . .59 
Epigrams, 400, 452, 497, 518, 521, 571 

— translated from Owen . . 610 
Epitaphs : Aretimias, On, by Her- 

aclides 515 

— Astrologers, On the . . 516 

— " At threescore winters " . . 514 

— Chester, Mr., On . . . 494 

— Epitaphium Alterum . . 414 

— " Fop "—a dog, On . . . 492 

— Fowler, On a, by Isiodorus . 517 

— Good Man, On a . .517 

— Hare, On a 413 

— Higgins, Mrs., On . . . 483 

— Infant, On an . . . . 515 

— Johnson, Samuel, On . . 437 

— Melanippus and his sister . . 514 

— Miltiades ! thy valor best . 514 

— My Name— my Country . . 513 

— Niobe, On, .... 517 

— Painter, this likeness . . 514 

— Pointer, On a . . . . 493 

— Redbreast, On a . . . .487 



Cowper 



110 



Epitaphs : Reed-pen, On a . . 515 

— Take to thy bosom . . . 514 
Exhortation to Prayer . . <71 

Expostulation 149 

Fair Lady! whose harmonious 

name 

Faith— "Simple Trust.' 1 (Mme 

Guyon.) . 
Faithful Bird, The 
Familiarity Dangerous . 
Father, To his. (Milton.) 
Felton, Nicholas, On death of, 

(Milton.) . 
Female Inconstancy, On 
Fish, On the High Price of 
Fit of Illness, In a . 
Flatting Mill, The 
Flatterers. Epigram on 
Flattering Mirror, Epigram 
Fop. a dog, Epitaph on 
Forbearance, Mutual . 
Four Ages, The 
Fowler, Epitaph on a . 
Francini's Ode to Milton 
Friend in Distress, To a 
Friendship 

Future Peace of the Church 
Garden-shed, Inscription for a 

— The. (Task.) . 
Gay, Fables of, Translations from 647 
German Ocean, Icebergs in the 506 
Gilpin, John, History of . . 240 
Glory to God alone. (Mme. Guyon.) 628 
God hides his People. (Mme. 

Guyon.) .... 632 
God neither known nor loved. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . 
Goldfinch starved to death 
Good Man, Epitaph on a 



596 
643 



574 

51ft 



406 
516 
521 
492 
431 
498 
517 
551 
610 
408 
58 
497 
284 



616 
396 
517 
572 
91 
94 
519 
439 



Goslyn, Dr. John, To. (Milton.) 
Gospel, Abuse of the . 
Grace and Providence . 
Grasshopper, On the . 
Gratitude .... 

— and Love to God. (Mme.Guyon) 623 
Gravina, Count, To . 504 
Greek verses translated . . 513 
Grief, On Immoderate . . 523 
Guns, Epigram to the Inventor of 571 
Guyon. Mme.. Translations from 612 
Halibut, To the memory of the 422 
Hamilton, Mr., Inscription for 

tomb of 506 

Hamper, On receipt of a . . 469 
Happy Change, The . . 81 

— Solitude— unhappy men. (Mme. 



Guyon.) 
Hare, Epitaph on a 
Hastings, Warren, To 
Hatred of Sin . 
Hayley, William, Sonnet to 



7i 



Hayley's Picture, On receiving 
Health, To ... 
Heart healed by Mercy 
Heel of a Shoe, On finding the 
Hermitage, Inscription for a . 
Hermocratia, On . . . 

Heroism 

Hen : quam remotus vescor . 
Heyne s "Virgil," On receiving 



624 
413 
489 

88 
491 
499 
494 
515 

88 

25 
496 
519 
404 

51 
505 



Hidden Life, The ... 82 
Higgins, Mrs. M., Epitaph on . 483 
High price of Fish . . .398 
Hill, Joseph, Epistle to . . .427 
Himself, Poem on . . .26 
Homer, Inscribed on the bust of 496 

— Neglect of . . . . 48 J 

— On a mistake in translating . 487 

Hope 166 

Horace, Fifth Satire of . . .524 

— Ninth Satire of . . .529 

— Translations from . . . 533 
House of Prayer .... 62 
Human Frailty . . . . 425 

— Life, Shortness of . . .611 
I am monarch of all I survey . 425 

— am the Lord that healeth thee 53 

— will praise the Lord . . .94 
Icebergs in the German Ocean . 506 
Idem Latine Redditum . . . 434 
Ignorant and Arrogant — an epi- 
gram 610 

Immoderate Grief . . . 523 
In Seditionem Horrendam . . 478 

— Submersionem Navigii cui . 415 
Inconstancy of Woman . . . 518 
Infant, Epitaph on an . . 515 
Innocent Thief, The . . .606 
Insanity, Lines written during . 50 
Inscription for a Garden-shed . 497 

— for a Hermitage . . . 496 

— for a Moss-house . . . 497 

— for a Stone . . . . 474 

— for the Tomb of Mr. Hamilton 506 
Invalids, Epigram on . . . 516 
Italian poets, Translations from 596 
Jehovah-Jireh .... 52 

— Jesus 68 

— Nissi 54 

— our Righteousness . .59 

— Rophi 53 

— Shalom 55 

— Shammah .... 60 
Jesus hasting to suffer . . .70 
Johnson, John, Sonnet to . . 495 

— Samuel, Epitaph on . . . 437 
Joy and Peace in Believing . 83 

— in Martyrdom. (Mme. Guyon.) 643 

— of the Cross. (Mme. Guyon.) 641 
Judgment of the Poets . . . 478 
Julianus— "Spartan Mother" . 513 
Kindness, Reciprocal . . . 599 
King, Mrs., To . . . .475 
Lady ! it cannot be but thine eyes 598 

— who lived one hundred years 604 
Leonora singing at Rome. (Mil- 
ton.) . . . . . 571 

Lepus Multis Amicis. (Fables of 

Gay.) 647 

Letters on Literature, On the au- 
thor of 438 

Life. Shortness of . . .611 

Light and Glory of the World . 71 

— shining in Darkness . .. 96 
Lily and the Rose . . . .434 
Lively Hope and Gracious Fear 85 
Living and Dead Faith, A , .90 

— Water. (Mme. Guyon.) . . 624 
Lloyd, Dr., To Memory of . . 470 

— Robert, Epistle to . . .42 
Longing to be with Christ . . 95 



Ill 



Cowper 



Looking upward in a Storm 
Lord my Banner, The . 

— send Peace, The 

— will provide, The 
Love, abused 



76 
. 54 

55 

52 
102 

87 



— constrained to Obedience . 

— f aithf ul in Absence. (Mme. 

Guyon.) .... 630 

— increased by Suffering. (Mme. 

Guyon.) 644 

— of God, the end of Life. (Mme. 

Guyon.) .... 631 

— of the World Reproved . . 389 

— Pure, Acquiescence of. (Mme. 

Guyon.) 627 

— Pure and Fervent. (Mme. 

Guyon.) 631 

— Symptoms of . . . 28 
Lovest thou me? . . . . 63 
Macartney, Miss, To . . . 46 
Mansfield's Library, Burning of 

Lord 395 

Manso, Giovanni Battista, To. 

(Milton.) ... 530, 583 

Manual, A 600 

Marriage, Forbearance in . .431 
Martyrdom, Joy in. (Mme. 

Guyon.) .... 643 

Mary, To 504 

Maze, The 608 

Meditation, Scenes favorable to. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . 645 

Melanippus and his Sister . . 514 
Memorable Year. 1789 . . 463 
Miltiades ! thy valor best . . 514 
Milton, Complimentary to . . 550 

— Dryden's epigram on . . 599 

— On liberties taken with re- 

mains of 476 

Milton's poems translated . . 554 
Mischievous Bull, On a . . . 469 
Miser. Epigrams on a . . . 518 
Modern Patriot, The . . .391 
Montagu's, Mrs., feather hang- 
ings 456 

Montes Glaciales, in Oceano Ger- 

manico .... 506 
Moralize:* Corrected, The . . 428 
Mox-ning Dream, The . . . 450 
Mortality, For the yearly bill of . 441 
Moss-house. Inscription for a . 497 I 
Mother's Picture, On receipt of 

his 471 

Motto for a Clock . . . 456 \ 
Mourning and Longing . . .78 
Mutual Forbearance . . .431 
My Mary 504 

— Soul thirsteth for God . . 8(5 
Names in Biographia Britannica 51 
Narrow Way, The ... 91 

Nativity, The 612 

Nature unimpaired by Time. 

(Milton.) 576 

Neapolitan, The .... 530 
Necessity of Self-Abasement. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . . 643 
Needless Alarm, The . . .460 
Negro's Complaint . . . 447 
New Convert, The . . . .89 
Newton. Mrs., To, on receiving 

oysters 393 



Newton, Rev. Mi , From a letter to 406 

To . . . . 396, 434 

Nightingale and Glow-worm . 391 

— Strada's 604 

— To the 486 

Niobe, Epitaph on 517 

No more snail hapless Celia's 

ears 45 

— sorrow peculiar to the sufferer 608 
Northcot, William, Inscription to 431 

Not works 93 

O Lord I will praise thee . . 57 
Ode on marriage of a friend . 41 

— on reading " Sir Charles Grand- 

ison" 39 

— to Milton, by Francini . . 531 
Odes of Horace translated . . 533 
Old Testament Gospel . . 65 

— Woman, Epigram on an . . 516 
Olney Hymns .... 52 

— Sunday-school, Hymn for . 468 
On the green margin of the 

brook— a song . . .46 
Opening a place for prayer . 69 
Ovid, Translation from . . . 548 
Owen, Epigrams translated from 610 
Oyster, The. and the Poet . . 436 
Oysters, On receiving a barrel of 399 
Pairing Time anticipated . . 423 
Palladus— " Spartan Mother " . 513 
Pallus bathing, On ... 520 

Papilio et Limax. (Fables of Gay) 649 
Paradise Lost, Simile from . 598 
Patience. Prayer for . . .80 
Peace after a storm ... 78 

— Ode to 415 

— Song on 416 

Pedigree, On, from Epicharmus . 522 
Perfect Sacrifice, The. (Mme. 

Guyon.) 632 

Pheasants, Thanks for a gift of 493 
Pineapple and the Bee, The . . 388 
Pity for Poor Africans . 449 

Platonic idea of Aristotle. (Milton.) 578 
Pleading for Youth ... 67 
Poet, Oyster, and Sensitive-plant, 

The 436 

Poet's New- Year's Gift, The . 446 
Pointer, Epitaph on a . . 493 

Poor. For the 86 

Poplar Field, The ... 439 
Praise for Faith . . . .93 

— for the Fountain opened . 61 
Prayer for Children . . 66, 68 
Progress of Error . . . 102 
Prudent Simplicity— an epigram 610 
Psalm cxxxvii. translated . . 512 

Quarrel, In a 29 

Queen's Visit to London . . 465 
R. S. S. " All worshiped Gold " .35 
Raven, The . . . . .392 
Reciprocal kindness . . . 599 
Reconciliation .... 30 
Redbreast, Epitaph on a tame . 487 

— Invitation to the . . . 603 
Redding, Richard, Death of. (Mil- 
ton.) 557 

Reed-pen. Epitaph on a . 515 

Report of an adjudged case . . 397 
Repose in God. (Mine. Guyon.) 628 
Retaliation— an epigram . .611 



Cowper 
Crabbe 



112 



Retired Cat, The ... 484 
Retirement .... 82,221 
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, To . .400 

Riddle 397 

Romney, George, Sonnet to . 492 

Rose, The 419 

Rous, John, Ode to. (Milton.) . 593 
' ' Royal George, ' ' On the loss of the 414 
Sacrifice, Perfect. (Mme. Guy on.) 632 
Salad, The, by Virgil . . .545 
Salsillo's Epigram to Milton . 530 
Salsillus, To. (Milton.) . . .582 

Sardis 56 

Satire, Fifth, of Horace . . 524 

— Ninth, of Horace . . .529 
Scenes favorable to Meditation. 

(Mme. Guyon.) ... 645 
Sea-bathing of his majesty . . 468 
Secrets of Divine Love to be kept. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . .633 
Secundum Artem — an ode . 48 
Seeking the Beloved . . .74 
Self -Abasement, Necessity of. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . .643 

— Acquaintance .... 79 

— Diffidence. (Mme. Guyon.) . 627 

— Knowledge— an epigram . 610 

— Love and Truth incompatible. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . .629 
Selkirk, Alexander, Verses sup- 
posed to be by . . . 425 
Selvaggrs epigram to Milton . 531 
Shakespeare. Imitation of. . 40 
Shining Light, The ... 72 
Shortness of Human Life . . 611 
Shrubbery, The . . . . 43S 
Silk-worm, The .... 605 
Simple Trust. (Mme. Guyon.) . 643 

Snail, The 609 

Sofa, The. (The Task.) . . 247 
Sonnets: As on a hill-top . . 596 

— Austen, Dr., To . . . . 4S8 

— Cowper, Henry, To . . 454 

— Diodati, Charles, To . . . 597 

— Enamored, artless, young . 598 

— Fair Lady ! whose harmonious 

name 596 

— Hayley, William, To . . . 491 

— Johnson, John, To . . . 495 

— Lady ! it cannot be but thine 

eyes 598 

— Romney, George, To . . 492 

— Unwin, Mrs., To . . . .495 

— Wilberforce, William, To . 488 

— Young Lady on her birthday, 

To a . . . .483 

Soul that Loves God, The. (Mme. 

Guyon.) .... 621 

Sower. The 62 

Spaniel called "Beau," On a . 502 
Spanish Admiral Gravina, To a . 504 j 
Sparkling eye. The— a song: . 45 
Sparrows. Self -domesticated . 602 
Spartan Mother, The . . . 513 , 
Spring, Elegy on the approach of 562 
Ktrada's Nightingale . . . 604 ; 

Stream, The 44 

Submission 80 

Suffering, Love increased by. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . . 644 ' 
Sunset and Sunrise— an epigram 611 I 



Surrender, Entire. (Mme. Guyon.) 631 
Swallow, The. (Mme. Guyon.) 617 

— To the 516 

Sweden, Queen of, Epigram to , 572 
Sweet meat' has sour sauce . . 451 
Symptoms of Love ... 28 

Table-talk 131 

Tales founded on fact . 387, 500 

Task, The 247 

Teaching of Cupid . . .523 
Tears of a Painter, The . . .607 

Temptation 76 

Testimony of Divine Adoption. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . .625 
Theft, On a late .... 488 
Thief, Innocent ... 606 

— On a . . • . . . ,521 
Thornton, J., In Memory of . 476 
Thracian, The. (Bourne.) . . 599 
Throckmorton, Mrs., To . . 471 
Throckmorton's, Mrs., Bullfinch 457 
Thurlow, Edward, Promotion of 390 
Time-piece, The. (The Task.) . 265 
Tirocinium; or, a Review of 

Schools . . . .366 
Tithing-time at Stock . . 453 
Translation from Ovid . . . 548 
! — of Psalm exxxvii. . . . 512 
j Translations from Gay's Fables . 647 
I — from Horace .... 533 
j — from Italian Poets . . . 596 
| — from French of Mme. Guyon 612 
j — from Virgil 535 

— of Milton "s Latin and Italian 

poems 554 

Triumph of Heavenly Love . 618 
True and False Comforts . . 89 

— Friend, Epigram on a . . 517 

— Pleasures 84 

Truth 117 

— and Divine Love. (Mme. 

Guyon.) 619 

Ugly Fellow, Epigram on an . 521 
Unwin, Mrs., Sonnet to . . . 495 

— Rev.W. C, To . ... 433 
Valediction, The . . . .420 
Valley of the Shadow of Death 77 
Vanity of the World ... 56 
Venerable Rival, Upon a . .39 
Vice-Chancellor, On death of. 

(Milton.) 572 

Vicissitudes of Christian Life. 

(Mme. Guyon.) . . .636 
Virgil, Translations from . . 535 
Virgin's Bower. On a plant of . 499 
Waiting Soul, The ... 73 
Walking with God . . . .52 
Waller, Edmund, Imitation of . 29 
Watching unto God. (Mme. 

Guyon.) .... 639 
Wealth, On late acquired . . 516 

— what it cannot buy . . . 520 
Welcome Cross . . . .74 

— to the Table .... 70 
What Wealth cannot buy . . 520 
When all within is peace . . 416 
Wilberforce, William, Sonnet to 488 
Winchester, Bishop of, Death of. 

(Milton.) .... 558 
Winter Evening. The. (The 

Task.) 303 



113 



Cowper 
Crab be 



Winter Morning Walk, The. (The 

Task.) 321 

— Nosegay, The ... .434 

— Walk at Noon, The. (The 

Task.) 342 

Wisdom 55 



Yardly Oak 479 

Yearly Distress, The . . . 453 
Young Friend, To a . . .496 

— Lady on her birthday, Son- 

net to 483 

— Thomas, Elegy to. (Milton.) 559 



Cowper, William, Hayley's epitaph to - White 460 

his grave ------ Bro. 75 

inscription of Hayley - - - White 461 

Jasmine, The ------ Flo. 120 

Knowledge and wisdom - Fav. 124 

Memoir of ------ Cow. 5 

Narcissus ------- Flo. 49 

Poem on himself ----- Cow. 26 

Cowslip, The. (Miss Landon.) - - - Flo. 29 

— The. (Mrs. Sigourney.) - - - - Flo. 27 

— the, Poesy of ------ Flo. 26 

Cowslips. (Mary Howitt.) - - - - Flo. 27 

Coxcomb, Epitaph on a - - - - Burns 186 

Coy one, The — songs ----- Goe. 24, 65 

CRABBE, GEOEGE. Poems of: 



Abel Keene .... 

Actors " Players " 
Advice ..... 
Almshouse and Trustees . 
Amusements .... 
Arabella ..... 
Baptisms. (The Parish Regis 

ter.) 

Benbow 

Birth of Flattery 

Blaney, Life of 

Borough, The .... 

Brothers, The .... 

Burials. (The Paris!? Register.) 

Church, The .... 

Clelia 

Clubs and Social Meetings . 
Confidant. The .... 
Conscience, Struggles of 
Convert, The .... 
Crabbe, George, Life of 

Curate, The 

Dumb Orators ... 
Edward Shore .... 
Election, The . 

Ellen Orford .... 
Flattery. Birth of . 
Frank Courtship, The 
Gentleman Farmer, The 
Grey, Sir Eustace 

Grimes, Peter 

Hospital and Governors, The . 

Inebriety 

Inhabitants of the Almshouse . 

Inns 

Jesse and Colin .... 

Keene, Abel 

Law. (Professions.) . 

Crabbe, George. 
Life of 

8 



454 

394 
147 
402 
370 



260 
419 
489 
409 
313 
198 
292 
320 
414 
378 
157 
136 
188 



1 
104 
346 
447 
489 
29 
23 
•499 
461 
425 
517 
414 
387 
124 
454 
351 



Evening sail 



Learned Boy, The . . . .207 
Library, The ..... 221 
Life of Blaney . . . .409 
Lover's Journey . 
Marriages. (Parish Register.) 
Mother, The .... 
Newspaper, The 
Orford, Ellen 
Parish Clerk, The . 

— Register, The . 
Parting hour, The . 
Patron, The .... 
Peter Grimes .... 
Physic. (Professions.) 

Players 

Poor and the Dwellings, The 

— of the Borough . 

Prisons 

Procrastination 
Professions— Law and Physic 
Reflections .... 
Religious Sects . 
Resentment .... 
Schools ..... 
Sects and Professions . 
Shore, Edward . 
Sir Eustace Grey . 
Squire and Priest 

— Thomas .... 
Struggles of Conscience . 
Tales of George Crabbe, Preface 

to .... 
Trades .... 
Vicar, The .... 

Village, The 236 

Wager, The 181 

Widow's Tale 70 

Woman! 515 



236 
v 



. 279 

80 

. 249 

447 
. 440 

260 

12 

43 

. 461 

359 
, 394 

431 
. 440 

469 
. 35 

351 
. 497 

334 
, 170 

477 

334 

104 
, 499 

156 

115 

136 



Fav. 
Cra. 



Crabbe 1 1 A 

Cum LL * 

Crabbe, George. Man's life - Fav. 39 

Practical charity - - - - - Fav. 59 

Eeflections Fav. 179 

Crabbed age and youth cannot - - - Sha. 1051 

Cradle-song of the poor ----- Pro. 70 

Craggs, James, Epistle to Pope 334 

Epitaph on ------ - Pope 343 

Poem to - - - - - - - Pope 390 

Craig, Clarinda, Letters to Burns 562 

Craigie-burn wood — a song - - - - Burns 235 

Craik, Miss, Letter to - Burns 490 

— Mrs. D. M. See Mulock, Dinah Maria. 

Crammed to the throat with wholesome - Tho. 478 

— with his distressful bread - Sha. 457 
Crane, Fox and ------- Goe. 237 

Cranes of Ibycus ------ Sch. 140 

Craniology - - - - - - - - Hood 554 

Cramner, Archbishop, c. in Henry viii. - Sha. 592 

— Archbishop, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

— Thomas— a sonnet ----- Wor. 369 
Crawls through life a paralytic - - - Erne. 311 
Creator spirit, by whose aid - Dry. 542 

— The - - - - - - - P. of F. 35 

Credit his own lie ----- - Sha. 2 

Credula quid liquidam sirena Neapoli - - Mil. 533 

Cree, Banks of — a song - Burns 262 

Creech, William, Epistle to - - - - Burns 167 

Letters to ----- - Burns 375, 435 

Creed of poverty — an epigram - - - Burns 183 

Creeds — an aphorism ------ Lon. 94 

Crescent-moon, The - Wor. 395 

Crescentius, Widow of - - - - - Hem. 97 

Cressida, dtr. of Calchas, c. in Troilus and Cress. Sha. 622 

Cresus. (Monkes Tale.) ----- Cha. 475 

Creuze, Miss, To, on her birthday - - Cow. 439 

Crew of Long Serpent ----- Lon. 257 

Cricket, Grasshopper and (anon.) - - Flo. 375 

Criminals, For condemned - Wes. 139 

Crisis, The ------ - Whi. 79 

Critic, The — a parable ----- Gloe. 230 

— To a - - - - - - - - She. 409 

Criticism, Essay on ----- - Pope 40 

Croaker, Mr. and Mrs., c. in Good-natured Man Gol. 178 

Crocus, Poesy of the ------ Flo. 29 

— To a. (Barton.) Flo. 30 

— To the. (Patterson.) ----- Flo. 32 
Croly. Domestic love ----- Fav. 29 

— Effects of oratory ------ Fav. 171 

— Lily of the valley -.---_- Flo. 73 
Croma --------- Qss. 249 



1 1 PC Crabbe 

1 1 J Cum 

Cromlet's lilt," Remarks on - Burns 311 

Cromwell, a servant, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 

— Henry, To - - - - - - - Pope 361 

— Oliver, Death of ----- - Dry. 22 

c. in Charles the First - She. 492 

Sonnet to Mil. 478 

Crooked foot-path, The - - - - - Hoi. 178 

Cross in the wilderness ----- Hem. 351 

— Joy of the. (Mme. Guy on.) - - - Cow. 641 

— of Saint Paul's Hood 516 

— of the South ----- . Hem. 262 

— The Her. 265; Whi. 166 

Crossed with adversity ----- Sha. 34 

Crosthwaite church, Inscription for - - Wor. 498 

Crowded street, The ------ Bry. 206 

Crown of sorrow, A ----- p ra 145 

Crowned and buried Bro. 262 

— and wedded - - - - - - Bro. 260 

— with the sickle and the wheaten - - - Tho. 105 
Crows to peck the eagles - Sha. 670 
Crucifixion, The ------ - Whi. 86 

Cruel Cerinthus ! does the fell disease - - Byron 133 

Cruelty to load a falling man - Sha. 618 

Cruikshank, Miss, To Burns 110 

— William, Epitaph on Burns 187 

Letters to - Burns 378, 400, 412 

Crusaders — a sonnet - Wor. 364 

— return, The .... Hem. 339 

— return, The. (Ivanhoe.) - Scott 420 

— war-song Hem. 335 

Crusades— a sonnet ------ Wor. 361 

Crushed by misfortune's yoke - - - Cam. 320 

Cry ' Havoc ' and let slip the dogs of war - Sha. 776 

— of a lost soul ------ Whi. 283 

— of the children - - - - - - Bro. 338 

— of the human ------ Bro. 271 

— hunters, The - Moore 529 

Cuba, Dr. Kane in. (E. H. W.) - - - Whi. 396 

Cuckoo and the nightingale --.--- Wor. 474 

— at Laverna Wor. 315 

— clock, The Wor. 207 

— To the Wor. 168 

— To the— a sonnet - Wor. 244 

Cuckow and the nightingale - Cha. 571 

Cuddie, for shame, hold up thy heavy head - Spe. 554 

Cudgel thy brains no more - Sha. 840 

Culloden, Anniversary of - - - - - Ayt. 134 

Culture - Erne. 232 

Cum millena tuam pulsare negotia - - - Her. 559 

— petit infantem princeps - Her. 594 



Cam I 1 a 

Dan liD 

Cum piscatores Textor legit esse vocatus - Her. 567 

— primum ratibua suis ----- Her. 571 

— simul in regeni nuper satrapasque - - Mil. 531 

— templis effare madent sudaria - - - Her. 573 

— tener ad sacros infans sistatur aquales - Her. 563 

— tu, Cliriste, cadis, nascor ... - Her. 589 
Cumberland, earl of, Sonnet to - Spe. 26 

— The - - Lon. 226 

Cunningham, Alexander, Letters to, Burns 433, 453, 458 

463, 467, 469, 479, 486, 497, 511 

— Allan. Town and country child - - Flo. 339 

— Lady E., Letter to - - - -• Burns 471 
Cunning livery of hell ----- Sha. 78 
Cup, Inscription on a - Byron 229 
Cupid and the dial (anon.) - Flo. 352 

— if storying legends tell aright - - - Col. 32 

— laid by his brand and fell asleep - - Sha. 1046 

— once upon a bed ----- Moore 41 

— painted blind - Sha. 163 

— Teaching of, by Moschus - - - Cow. 523 

— whose lamp has lent the ray - - - Moore 59 

Cupido - - Erne. 221 

Cupid's lottery ------ Moore 300 

Cur efficaci Deucalion manu - - - Her. 569 

— Latium linguam reris nimis esse - - - Her. 566 

— splendes, O Phcebe? Her. 539 

— tanta sufflas probrain innocuam crucem - Her. 563 

— ubi tot ludat numeris antiqua poesis - Her. 561 
Curan, a courtier, c. in King Lear - - - Sha. 847 

Curate, The - Cra. 330 

Cure for all care— a song - - - Burns 195 

Curfew -------- Lon. 94 

Curio, a gentleman, c. in Twelfth Night - - Sha, 281 

Curious reader, didst thou ne'er - - - Hood 608 

Curre per immensum subito mea littera - - Mil. 518 

Curse for a nation - Bro. 357 

— of Adam - Hood 167 

— of Minerva ------- Byron 199 

— of the charter-breakers Whi. 76 

— on all laws but those which - - - Pope 111 

— on ungrateful man - Burns 177 
Cursed be the man, the poorest wretch - Burns 186 

— be the social wants ----- Ten. 90 

— be the verse, how well soe'er - - - Pope 272 
Curses not loud but deep ----- gha. 807 
Curtis, a servant, c. in Taming of Shrew - Sha. 229 
Curts' wedding- journey - Goe. 112 
Custom more honored in the breach - - Sha. 816 
Cuthullin. Death of - Oss. 383 

- sat by Tura's wall ----- Oss.' 293 



mCum 
Dan 

Cyclops, The — a satiric drama - She. 523 

Cyllenius now to Pluto's dreary reign - - Odys. 324 

Cymbeline — a play Sha. 944 

Cymon and Iphigenia - Dry. 462 

Cynddylan, Hall of - Hem. 242 

Cypress, Poesy of the ----- Flo. 188 

— tree of Ceylon ------ Whi. 108 

— tree, The. (Blackwood's Magazine.) - Flo. 190 

— wreath, The - - - - - Scott 214 ; Flo. 189 

Cyprian, c. in Magico Prodigioso - - - She. 537 

Cyprus, Wine of ------ Bro. 101 

Cyriac, this three years' day— a sonnet - Mil. 481 

D , To ------ Byron 131 

Dgemonic love, The ------ Erne. 97 

Daer, lord, On meeting with - Burns 100 

Daffodil, Poesy of the Flo. 35 

Daffodils. (Herrick.) - - - Flo. 36; Fav. 419 

— Wor. 172; Fav. 28; Flo. 37 

— that come before Sha. 320 

Dagonet, the fool, whom Gawain - Ten. 519 

Dahlia, The Flo. 157 

— Poesy of the Flo. 156 

Daily the bending skies solicit - - - - Erne. 278 

— trials - Hoi. 6 

— when I do seek and sue for peace - - Spe. 689 
Dainties that are bred in a book - - - Sha. 145 
Dainty Davie — a song Burns 256, 338 

— little maiden, whither would - - - Ten. 684 
Daisie of light ! very ground of comfort - - Flo. 16 

Daisies, Buttercups and Flo. 535 

Daisy, Poesy of the ------ Flo. 15 

— The. (Chaucer.) - - - - - - Flo. 16 

— The - Ten. 249 

— To a mountain - - - - Burns 80 ; Flo. 17 

— To the - - - Wor. 145, 416, 491; Flo. 16, 428 
Dakry, a wizard, c. in CEdipus Tyrannus - She. 323 
Dalecarlian mine, Scene in a - - - - Hem. 378 
Dalila, c. in Samson Agonistes - - - Mil. 350 
Dalrymple, James, 1787, Letter to - - Burns 389 
Dalzel, Alexander, Letter to - - • - Burns 467 

Damsetas - - Byron 143 

Damn with faint praise, assent with - - Pope 270 

Damnation. (Peter Bell the Third. ) - - She. 310 

Damon and Sylvia — a song - Burns 291 

— Death of. (Milton.) Cow. 586 

— or Spring Pope 27 

Damsel of Peru ------- Bry. 100 

Damsels having eyes of wonder - - P. of F. 25 

Dan cupid, regent of love rhymes - - - Sha. 14S 



Dana 11Q 

Day li0 

Dana, Richard H. Flowers sent during illness Flo. 523 

— Richard H., Sonnet to ----- Lon. 401 

Danaides, The Sch. 269 

Dance attendance on their lordship's pleasure Sha. 617 

— of death — a ballad ----- Gi-oe. 131 

— of death -------- Scott 395 

— of the consumptives ----- White 248 

— of women — a sonnet ----- R s. 154 

— The - Bro. 348; Sch. 234 

Dandelion, To the - - - - Low. 83 ; Flo. 525 

Danger of losing his friend - - - Wes. 35 

Dangerous consequences - - - • - Sch. 265 

Daniel in the lion's den Wor. 388 

Danish boy, The ------ Wor. 152 

— conquests — a sonnet ----- Wor. 360 
DANTE, ALIGHIERI, Poems of. (Cary's edition.) 

Chronological view of age of I Paradise 242 

Dante vii Purgatory 121 

Hell 1 | 

Dante, Alighieri, at Verona - Ros. 56 

Bust of. (T. W. Parsons.) - - - Fav. 446 

On portrait of, by Giotto - Low. 87 

Poem from ------ she. 535 

Sonnets to ----- Lon. 91, 393 

To - - - - - - - - Ten. 729 

— "who 'mid the grasses of the field " - - Bry. 315 
Dantis tenebrae — a sonnet - Ros. 162 
Danube and the Euxine ----- Ayt. 191 

— Bride of the. (Miss Pickersgill.) - - Flo. 87 

— Danube, wherefore com'st thou - - - Ayt. 191 

— Source of the — a sonnet - Wor. 294 
Dan vers, Sir John, Letter to - Her. 485 

— Lord, On - Her. 308 

Daoud, c. in Hellas - - - - - - She. 377 

Daphnaida— an elegy Spe. 666 

Daphne or winter ---_._ p pe 37 

Daphnis— a pastoral - Vir. 29 

Dar-Thula Oss. 369 

Dara - Low. 335 

Darby, Miss. " The Lord of life walked " - Flo. 183 

Dardanius, a servant, c. in Julius Csesar - Sha. 764 

Dares the llama, most fleet of the sons - - She. 565 

Darest thou amid the varied multitude - She. 558 

— thou, Cassius, now, leap in with me - - Sha. 766 
Daring youth ! for thee it is well - - - Scott 426 
Dark Ahriman, whom Irak still - - - Scott 449 

— and more dark the shades of evening - Wor. 235 

— at the night, which now in dunnest - - Gol. 58 

— backward and abysm - Sha. 2 

— day, A— a sonnet - Ros. 260 



119 



Dana 
Day 



Dark flowers of Cheshire garden - - - Erne. 311 

— glass, The— a sonnet - - - - - Ros. 243 

— is the morning with mist - Lon. 398 

— side, The - - - - - - - Pro. 102 

— the halls, and cold the feast - Whi. 40 
Darkened mind, The ----- Low. 362 
Darkness ----- Byron 261 ; Fav. 73 

— dwells around Dunlathmon - - - Oss. 243 

— surrounds us ; seeking ----- "Wor. 355 
Darling, G-race- ------ Wor. 460 

— of science and the muse - White 222 
Darlings of children and of bard - Erne. 283 
Dart, the greyhound, In memory of - - Wor. 420 
Darwin, Erasmus. Mimosa, The - - - Flo. 109 

To - - Cow. 489 

Dashwood, John, Letter to - - White 152 

Date-tree, Blossoming of solitary - - - Col. 220 

Daughter, Epitaph on his - - - - Burns 184 

— of heaven, fair art thou !.---- Oss. 369 

— To my - - - - - - - Byron 239 

— To my, on her birthday - . - - - Hood 171 

— to that good earl, once president - - - Mil. 475 
Daughters of Eve ! your mother did not - Ing. 349 

— of heaven and earth ----- Erne. 143 

— of Jove, whose voice is melody - She. 52£l 

— ofPandarus- ------ Bro. 17* > 

— of time, the hypocritic days - Erne. 197 f 
Daunton, To --_-,- Burns 2H 
Davenport, Abraham ----- Whi. 31:5 
David, Thirsis and Angel Gabriel - - - Tho. 45! 
David's grief for his child --.-"- Wil. 2\ 
Davidson, Lucretia M. Charnel ship - - Fav. 26i 
Davie, Epistles to - Burns 150, 16( 

— Gellatley's songs. (Waverley.) - - - Scott 391 
Davies, Miss, Letters to - - - - Burns 423, 471 
Davy, a servant, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - - Sha. 40J 
Dawn - - Wil. 28i 

— gentle flower Flo. 451 

Dawning, The ------- Her. 20! 

Day, John William. Picket before Bull Run Fav. 22) 

— break ------ Lon. 223; Mer. 27\ 

— break, Sura of - P. of F. 13! 

— dream, A Bry. 255; Col. 21) 

— dream, The — a sonnet ----- Ros. 30! 

■ — dream, The — a prologue - Ten. 10; j 

— glimmered ; and beyond the precipice - Rog. 16; I 

— glimmered in the east - - Rog. 1'4 

— hast thou two faces Erne. 197 

— hath put on his jacket Hoi. 6 

— in June. (J. R. Lowell.) - Flo. 334 



Day -|90 

Dearest xwv 

Day is done, The - - Lon. 87: Fav. 223; Poe 31 

— is down into his bower - - Mer. 446 

— is dying ! float, O song - - Eliot 180 

— is gone, The — a sonnet - - - - Keats 248 

— of love — a sonnet - - Ros. 234 

— of love -------- Moore 653 

— of sunshine ----- - Lon. 227 

— returns, The ------ Burns 212 

— set on Norham's castle steep - - Scott 48 

— stars that ope your eyes - Flo. 439 
Daylight and moonlight ----- Lon. 216 
Days --------- Erne. 196 

— full of rapture - - - - - Goe. 53 

— last light is dying out ----- Mer. 287 

— of yore. (Douglas Thompson.) - - Fav. 285 

— passed, and Monte Calvo would not - - Wor. 314 

— rations, The ------- Erne. 121 

— undefiled by luxury or sloth - - - Wor. 440 

— without alloy ------- Ing. 510 

De profundis ------- Bro. 605 

The two greetings ----- Ten. 719 

Deacon's masterpiece ----- Hoi. 172 

Dead Christ, The. (Michelangelo.) - - Lon. 466 

— eagle, The ------- Cam. 273 

— for a ducat, dead ------ Sha. 832 

— he lay among his books - Lon. 394 

— house, The ------- Low. 353 

— leaves. (Ella Ingram.) - Flo. 195 

— long dead, long dead - Ten. 238 

— one of them shot by the sea - - - Bro. 619 

— orthodoxy ------- Wes. 161 

— Pan, The Bro. 104 

— past, The - - Pro. 46 

— Petra in her hill-tomb sleeps - - - Whi. 244 

— princess, hving power - Ten. 661, 707 

— rose, A - - - - - - Bro. 294 ; Flo. 281 

— ship of Harpswell ------ Whi. 309 

— Spirits of the ----- - Poe 164 

— The --------- Lon. 22 

— thirteen a month ago - Bro. 593 

— violet, On a - - - - - - - She. 410 

— year, A ------- i n g. 81 

Deadman's island, On passing - - - Moore 203 

Deal of skimble-skamble stuff - - - Sha. 396 

Dean of faculty— a ballad - Burns 286 

Dear Anna, between friend and friend - Cow. 401 

— Anna, when I brought her vail - - - Whi. 398 

— architect of fine chateaux - Cow. 499 

— are the days of youth Byr. 167 

— aunt, in the olden time of love - - Moore 299 



121 



Day 

Dearest 



Dear be the church, that watching - - - Wor. 376 

— Becher, you tell me to mix with - - Byron 167 

— Charles, whilst yet thou wert - - - Col. 175 

— child, how radiant on thy mother's knee Lon. 82 

— child of nature, let them rail - - - Wor. 198 

— colonel Cobham's and you - - - Pope 310 

— common flower, that grow'st beside Low. 83; Flo. 525 

— coz, as I know neither you nor - - Moore 634 

— Dick, while old Donaldson's mending Moore 504 

— Doll, while the tails of our horses - - Moore 484 

— droll, distracting town Pope 361 

— Fanny - Moore 647 

— Fanny, I mean, now I'm laid on the shelf White 32 

— Fanny, nine long years ago - - - Hood 171 

— fellow-travelers ! think not that the muse - Wor. 292 

— friend, sit down, the tale is long - - Her 

— friends, we are strangers - Hoi 

— friends, who read the world aright - - Whi 

— girl I send the spray of flowers - - - Flo 

— goddess of corn, whom the ancients 

— governor, if my skiff might brave 

— harp of my country - 

— home, thou scene — a fragment - 

— Horace ! be melted to tears 

— I tried to write you such a letter 

— I'll gie ye some advice 

— is my little native vale - 

— Joseph, five and twenty years ago - 

— Long, in this sequestered scene - 

— Lord, accept a sinful heart - - - Cow. 

— my friend and fellow student - - - Bro 

— Myra, the captive ribbon's mine - - Burns 331 

— native Brook, wild streamlet of - - - Col. 92 

— native regions I foretell - Wor. 

— near and true, no truer time - - - Ten. 

— object of defeated care - Byron 244 

— Peter, dear Peter Burns 180 

— president, whose art sublime - - - Cow. 400 

— reliques ! from a pit of vilest mold - - Wor. 286 

— Reynolds ! as last night I lay - - - Keats 258 

— set the casement open Pro. 369 

— simple girl, those flattering arts - - Byron 132 

— sir, I've just had time to look - - Moore 306 

— sir, your letter come to hand - - - Low. 285 

— sister ! while the wise and sage - - - Whi. 144 

— Smith, the sleest paukie thief - - - Burns 161 

— to the loves, and to the graces vowed - - Wor. 399 
Dearer than eyesight, space and liberty - Sha. 847 
Dearest, a look is but a ray .... Hoi. 80 

— where thy shadow falls - Erne. 247 



218 

287 

162 

92 

Moore 616 

- Hoi. 125 
Moore 254 

- She. 501 
Cam. 317 

- Pro. 292 
Burns 176 

- Rog. 246 
Cow. 



427 
Byron 171 

79 
580 



15 

390 



Death 1 O i) 

Dedication 

Death ----- Her. 289; She. 396, 406, 464 

— a dialogue ------- She. 558 

— and Dr. Hornbook ----- Burns . 39 

— Angel of - - - - - - - P. of F. 126 

— Apparent Goe. 43 

— as the Psalmist saith - - - - - Sha. 423 

— bed, The ----- Hood 169 ; Fav. 89 

— boat of Heligoland ----- Cam. 250 

— bursting on the halls ----- Hem. 282 

— Certainty of ------ Cow. 44 

— comes to man with hasty strides - - Sch. 343 

— Dance of ----- Goe. 131; Scott 395 

— day of Korner, The ----- Hem. 412 

— Dedication to - . - - - - - - Sch. 293 

— Desiring --.-.-'--- Wes. 45 

— Eve of ------- White 264 

— f orerunneth love to win - - - - Bro. 100 

— Hour of - ■• -Hem. 358 

— inlife - - - Mer. 270 

— in love - Eos. 250 

— In prospect of Wes. 137, 372 

— in the pot! 'tis always there - - - Wes. 277 

— is here and death is there - She. 464 

— is the penalty imposed ----- Mil. 171 

— lament of wife of Asan Aga - - - Goe. 147 

— Life and. (Ben Jonson.) ... - Fav. 298 

— Love and - Ten. 19 

— Near -------- Wes. 57 

— never came so nigh to me before - - Low. 87 

— Night and. (E. H. W.) - Whi. 397 

— of a friend ------- Wes. 145 

— of a friend's child - Low. 87 

— of a lady - - - - - - - Moore 80 

— of a mad dog, Elegy on - Gol. 128 

— of a minister ------- Cow. 72 

— of a missionary ------ Wil. 68 

— of a young gentleman - Dry. 315 

— of a young girl Wil. 289 

— of Aliator - - Bry. 146 

— of an infant ------- Mil. 400 

— of Arthur Ten. 60 

— of C. T. Torrey Low. 104 

— of Calmar and Orla Byron 167 

— of Chatterton Col. 47 

— of Clanronald Hem. 335 

— of Conradin Hem. 119 

— of Cuthullin Oss. 383 

— ofDermody - White 374 

— of Edward Payson Wil. 298 

— of favorite child Burns 140 



1 9 Q Death 

1 ^ ° Dedication 

Death of H. S. Boyd- -a sonnet - - - Bro. 93 

— of his mother - Tho. 403 

— of Keeldar ------- Scott 447 

— of King Hacon Mer. 240 

— of Lincoln Bry. 316 

— of Mr. P-r-v-1 Moore 595 

— of Moses Eliot 133 

— of poor Mailie Burns 35 

— of Eichard Dillingham - - - Whi. 166 

— of Schiller - Bry. 184 

— of Sheridan - - - - - - - Moore 594 

— of slavery Bry. 317 

— of the flowers. (C. Bowles.) - - - Flo. 271 

— of the flowers ----- Bry. 92 ; Fav. 188 

— of the fly Goe. 236 

— of the old year Ten. 54 

— of the suitors - - Odys. 303 

— of thee do I make my moan - - Eos. 137 

— of W. H. Harrison ------ Wil. 232 

— of Wellington— an ode - - - - Ten. 246 

— of Wesley, Charles ----- Wes. 49 

— On prospect of ------ White 334 

— parting, A Eos. 285 

— penalty, Sonnets on the - Wor. 442 

— (Peter Bell the Third.) - She. 305 

— song of an Indian woman - Hem. 182 

— ("Thanatos") White 2Q6 

— still draws nearer, never seeming near - Pope 204 

— takes him hame to gie him quarter - Burns 185 

— thou wast once an uncouth hideous thing Her. 289 

— To,— of his lady ------ Eos. 137 

— vanquished - - - ■ - - - She. 559 

— when we meet the specter in our walks - Eog. 108 

— where is thy victory? She. 559 

Death's ramble ------ Hood 376 

— songsters — a sonnet ------ R s. 269 

Debate in the sennit. (Biglow papers.) - Low. 184 

Decay --------- Her. 188 

Deceased wife, Sonnet on his ... Mil. 482 

December and May Hood 541 

— (Shepherd's Calendar.) - Spe. 562 

— twenty-second Bry. 129 

Decius Brutus, a conspirator, c. in Julius Caesar Sha. 764 

Declaration, The Wil. 193 

— of war — a song Goe. 29 

Decoration-day Lon. 408 

De Couci, c. in Vespers of Palermo - - Hem. 493 

Dedication, ' ' Dear, near and true " - - - Ten. 390 

— hymn Wil. 74 

— of Faust Goe. 390 : Fav. 9 



Dedication 1 94. 

Descriptive m.a'X 

Dedication of Halleck monument - - - Hoi. 274 

— of Michelangelo Lon. 415 

— of Pittsfield cemetery Hoi. .123 

— of poems - - Goe. 17 

— of school house. (Miss Limes.) - - -Fav. 236 

— of sonnets - Wor. 226 

— of the Shepherd's Calendar - - - Spe. 517 

— of Ultima Thule Lon. 394 

— to death -------- Sch. 293 

— to Don Juan Byron 316 

— to Gavin Hamilton Burns 90 

— to George Coleridge - - - - - - Col. 27 

— to sea-side and fireside ----- Lon. 121 

— to songs of labor Whi. 112 

Dedicatory to princess Alice - - - Ten. 661, 707 

Deem not, sweet rose, that bloom'st 'midst - Cow. 483 

— these words life's good-night - - - Mer. 55 
Deep damnation of his taking off - - - Sha. 792 

— in the shady sadness of a vale - - - Keats 200 

— is the lamentation ----- Wor. 367 

— on the convent roof the snows - - - Ten. 106 

— sunk in nature's base desire - - - Wes. 278 

— within my heart of hearts -"■--- Pro. 340 
Deepen the wound thy hands have made - Wes. 257 
Deeper and bolder truths be careful - - Sch. 265 

— than did ever plummet sound - - - Sha. 14, 18 

Defense of Lucknow - Ten. 661 

DeftonWood ------- Ing. 456 

Degenerate Douglas ! — a sonnet - - -Wor. 259 

Den's awa' wi' the exciseman— a song - - Burns 234 

Deiphobus, son of Priam, c. in Tr. and Cress. Sha. 622 

Dejection — an ode Col. 191 

Delaware, To Whi. 123 

Delawares, Legend of the - Bry. 332 

Delawarr, earl, To George - Byron 174 

Delays have dangerous ends - Sha. 482 

Delia - - Lon. 380 

— after leaving her at New Burns - - Cow. 32 

— an ode ------- Burns 118 

— Apologies to Cow. 27 

— Appeal to, for forgiveness - Cow. 30 

— Despair at separation from - - - Cow. 34 

— on her trying to hide grief - - - - Cow. 33 

— To - Cow. 31, 37 

Delia's absence ------- Cow. 32 

Delight and softest sympathy - - - Wes. 322 

Deliverance of Vienna ----- Mac. 191 

Delos' stately rules, and Maia's son - - Goe. 272 

Delphi, Storm of - - Hem. 307 

Deluded swain, the pleasure— a song - - Burns 258 



-j 9 K Dedication 

± ~< J Descriptive 

Demetrius, c. in Mids. Night's Dream - - Sha. 161 

— son of Tamora, c. in Titus Andronicus - Sha. 688 

— c. in Antony and Cleopatra - Sha. 911 
Democracy ------- Whi. 105 

Democratic food soon cloys - Goe. 273 

Demogorgon, c. in Prometheus Unbound - She. 219 

Demon, c. in Magico Prodigioso - - - She. 542 

— of the study- ------ Whi. 124 

— of the world ------- She. 571 

— ship, The ------- Hood 355 

Denial Her. 166 

Denmark, National song of - - - - Lon. 21 

Denmark's sage courtier to her princely - - Scott 328 

Denner's old woman ----- Cow. 607 

Dennis, c. in As You Like It - - Sha. 205 

Denny, Sir Anthony, c. in Henry viii. - Sha, 592 

Depart, depart, O child ----- Wil. 52 

Departed child ! I could forget thee once - Wor. 112 

— days- - Hoi. 33 

— spirit, To a Hem. 212 

— The - - - -Hem. 418 

Departing, For one - Wes. 140 

— summer hath assumed Wor. 427 

— year, Ode to Col. 132 

Departure — a sonnet ------ Goe. 216 

— from life - Sch. 249 

— from Vale of Grasmere ----- Wor. 252 

— of summer - Hood 137 

— of Ulysses from Calypso - - - Odys. 72 

— The Ten. 103 

Dependence -------- Cow. 92 

De Peyster, Colonel, To Burns 148 

Deplorable his lot who tills the ground - - Wor. 363 

Derby, Earl of (Stanley), c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 556 

Dercetas, friend of Antony, c. in Ant. and Cleo. Sha. 911 

Dermody, Death of - - - - - - White 374 

Derne - Whi. 164 

Dersagrena, c. in Comala ... - Oss. 203 

Derwent, River, To the Wor. 398 

De Sauty — an electro-chemical eclogue - Hoi. 182 

Descend from Heaven, Urania, by that name Mil. 158 

— ye nine ! descend and sing - - - - Pope 351 

Descendants of Alfred Wor. 359 

Descent into hell Goe. 263 

— into hell Odys. 152 

— The Rog. 19 

— of the Muses Lon. 381 

Describe the borough ----- Cra. 313 

Description of the shield Iliad 389 

Descriptive sketches - - - - Wor. 21 



Desdemona 1 9A 

Diomedes L * u 

Desdemona, dtr. of Brabantio, c. in Othello - Sha. 879 

Deserted garden Bro. 50 

— house Hem. 235 

— house Ten. 18 

— village G-ol. 86; Fav. 25 

Desire Mer. 186 

— A— a sonnet Bro. 88 

— A - - Pro. 383 

— love, hope and fear She. 469 

— we past illusions to recall - Wor. 402 
Desiring death Wes. 45 

— to love - - - - -* - - . - Wes. 323 

Desmond's song - Moore 273 

Despair — a dramatic monologue - - - Ten. 725 

— a fragment - White 262 

Despise thou not the wild flower - - - Flo. 156 

Despond who will," I heard a voice - - - Wor. 404 

Despondency — an ode - - - - ' - Burns 82 

— (Excursion.) - - - - - - - Wor. 621 

— corrected. (Excursion.) - Wor. 633 
Desponding father ! mark this altered - - Wor. 238 
Destined to war from very infancy - - Wor. 488 
Destiny of nations, The — a vision - - - Col. 74 
Destroy his fib, or sophistry - Pope 267 
Destruction of Jerusalem - - - Byron 195 

— of Madgeburg — a song --.-'- Qoe. 77 

— of Sennacherib, The ... - Byron 195 

Desultory stanzas Wor. 306 

Deuk's dang o'er my daddie — a song - Burns 244 

Deum, Ad - Her. 580 

Deuteronomy, On passages in - - - Wes. 173, 253 

Devil among the scholars - Moore 609 

— can cite scripture - Sha. 184 

— The. (Peter Bell the Third.) - - - She. 306 
Devil's thoughts, The - Col. 217 

— walk, The— a ballad She. 569 

De Vipont, Adam, c. in Halidon Hill - - Scott 462 

Devise, wit! write, pen! - - - v - Sha. 139 

Devon, Banks of the — a song - - - Burns 207 

Devonshire, Written in - - - - - Keats 2Q2 

Devotional incitements ----- Wor. 206 
Devouring time, blunt thou the lion's paws Sha. 1030 

Dew-sweet eglantine Flo. 137 

De Wilton's history. (Marmion.) - - Scott 96 

Dharra and the date-stone - - - P. of F. 79 

Dial of flowers - - Hem. 349 

Dialect, Yankee, Notes on Low. 209 

Dialogue - - Her. 206 

— Sch. 304 

— anthem Her. 271 



127 



Desdemona 
Diomedes 



Dialogue between a sovereign and a one-pound 

note Moore 

— from Soul Gardening. (Dora Greenwell) Flo. 
Dialogues with flowers - - - - - Flo. 
Diana, a goddess, c. in Pericles - - - Sha. 

— dtr. of widow, c. in All's Well that Ends Well Sha. 
Diana's foresters, gentlemen in Henry iv., pt. 1 Sha. 



Diary of a politician, Extracts from - Moore 

Dicite, sacrorum prsesides memorum dese - Mil. 
Dick the Butcher, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - Sha. 
Dickens, Charles. The ivy green - - Flo. 

Song for dinner to, 1842 - Hoi. 

Did Cytherea to the skies - Cow. 

— Jove a queen of flowers decree - - - Flo. 

— not Moore 

— not my Muse (what can she less?) - - Cow. 

— not Ossian hear a voice? - Oss. 

— not thy reason and thy sense - Cow. 

— pangs of grief for lenient — a sonnet - - Wor. 

— she m summer write it Ros. 
Didst thou never hear that things ill got - - Sha. 
Die a dry death ------ Sha. 

— of a rose in aromatic pain - Pope 

— when you will you need not wear - - Moore 
Died. (The Times Obituary.) - Bro. 

Dies Ira3 ■ - Mac. 

Different emotions on the same spot - - Goe. 

— threats — a song Goe. 

Digby, Robert and Mary, Epitaph on - - Pope 
Diggon Davie ! I bid her good-day - - - Spe. 
Diggory, c. in She Stoops to Conquer - - Gol. 

Dilemma, The - Hoi. 

Dilettante and the critic - - - - Goe. 
Dillingham, Richard, Death of ... Whi. 

Dim as the borrowed beams of moon - - Dry. 

— forms ye hover near . - Faust 9 

— hour that sleep'st on pillowing clouds - Col. 61 

— shadows gather thickly round - - - Pro. 159 

— vales and shadowy floods - Poe 160 

— vanities of dreams by night - Poe 154 

— with the mist of years, gray flits - - Byron 290 
Dinas Emlinn, lament ; for the moment - - Scott 375 

Ding-dong ! ding-dong ! White 248 

Dinner to admiral Farragut - Hoi. 262 

— to general Grant Hoi. 261 

Diodati, Charles, Elegies to - Cow. 554, 566 
Sonnet to ------ Cow. 597 

— ete '1 diro con maraviglia - - - Mil. 473 

Diomed, Acts of Iliad 128 

Diomedes, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - Sha. 622 



617 
162 
213 
977 
254 
383 
325 
545 
496 
178 

34 
517 
102 
104 

27 
479 

29 
403 
298 
534 
2 
192 
102 
613 
163 

33 

35 
345 
550 
270 
4 
231 
166 
162 



Diomedes 128 

Diomedes, an attendant, c. in Ant. and Cleo. Sha. 911 

Dion Woi\ 193 

— a lord, c. in Winter's Tale - - - Sha. 304 
Dionyza, wife of Cleon, c. in Pericles - - Sha. 977 
Dip down upon the northern shore - - Flo. 332 
Dire combustion and confused events - - Sha. 795 

— was the hate at old Harlan - Burns 286 
Dirge, A Ten. 19 

— for the year She. 436 

— in Siege of Valencia Hem. 455 

— " Mourn shepherd Wor. 490 

— of a child - -Hem. 330 

— of the highland chief in Waverley - - Hem. 334 

— of Wallace ------ -Cam. 196 

— " Old winter was gone " - She. 474 

— " Eough wind that moanest " - - - She. 447 
Dirges ------- Hem. 265, 377 

Disappointed statesman ----- Hoi. 120 

Disappointment ------ Cow. 38 

— Ode on ------- W^hite 37 

Disappointments, Thanksgiving for - - Wes. 46 

Disarmament - Whi. 374 

Disasters. (Longfellow.) - Fav. 261 

Discharge, The - Her. 242 

Disciplina ecclesise, Pro - Her. 558 

Discipline - Her. 281 

Disconsolate tenant of clay - - - Wes. 42 

Discontent — a sonnet - Bro. 86 

Discord. (Divan, book i.) - - - Goe. 364 

— and plots, which have undone - - - Dry. 499 
Discouraged ------- Pro. 287 

Discourse of the wanderer. (Excursion.) - Wor. 697 

Discoverer of the North Cape - Lon. 222 

Discovery made too late — a sonnet - - - Col. 92 

— of Ulysses to Euryclea - Odys. 264 

— of Ulysses to Telemachus - - - Odys. 225 
Discreet hint— a song ----- Burns 213 
Diseased nature oftentimes breaks - - - Sha. 395 
Diseases desperate grown by desperate - Sha. 834 
Dishonored rock and ruin ! Wor. 385 
Disinterred warrior, The - Bry. 106 
Disposed to wed e'en while you hasten - - Cra. 279 
Dissensions — a sonnet ----- Wor. 356 
Dissertations on poems of Ossian - - Oss. 44, 57, 88 
Dissolution of the holy alliance - - - Moore 569 

— of the monasteries — a sonnet - - - Wor. 366 
Distant one, To the — a song - - - - Goe. 46 

— ship, The Hem. 425 

Distichs Goe. 273 

Distractions— a sonnet • - Wor. 370 



129 



Diomedes 
Do 



Distress and danger, In Wes. 27 

Distressed travelers - Cow. 417 

Distresses of a disabled soldier — an essay - Gol. 507 

Dithyramb - Sch. 117 

Divan, On the - Goe. 208 

— West-Eastern - - - Goe. 362 

Diver, The - Sch. 159 

— The. (Hemans.) Fav. 295 

Diverting history of John Gilpin - - - Cow. 240 

Divided -------- i n g. 9 

Divina Commedia ■ Lon. 322 

Divine adoption, Testimony of . (Mme. Guyon.) Cow. 625 

Divine Comedy. (Cary's translation.) - Dante 1 

— compassion ------ -Whi. 339 

— considerations, Notes to Her. 405 

— justice amiable. (Mme. Guyon.) - - Cow. 620 

— love endures no rival. (Mme. Guyon.) - Cow. 626 

— love, Procedure of. (Mme. Guyon.) - - Cow. 618 

— love, Secrets of. (Mme. Guyon.) - - Cow. 633 

— perfection of a woman - Sha. 558 

— voice, The - - Hoi. 185 

Divinity - Her. 224 

— in odd numbers Sha. 63 

Division of the earth Sch. 187 

Dixon, James. Indian summer. - - - Flo. 277 

Do angels wear white dresses, say? - - Fav. 436 

— as adversaries do in law - Sha. 236 

— good by stealth and blush to find it fame Pope 323 

— I believe, sayest thou, what the masters - Sch. 239 

— I not feel ! the doubt is keen as steel - White 350 

— I not see that fairest images - Spe. 696 

— I see a contest yonder - Goe. 197 

— my spiriting gently - Sha. 4 

— not as some ungracious pastors do - - Sha. 815 

— not ask me, or doubts like these - - - Scott 427 

— not beguile my heart Her. 241 

— not cheat thy heart and tell her - - - Pro. 33 

— not crouch to-day and worship - Pro. 87 ; Fav. 386 

— not lift him from the bracken - - - Ayt. 87 
— - not repent, mine own love - Goe. 279 

— not saw the air too much - - - - She. 827 

— right — it recompenseth ! do one wrong - Am. 150 

— we not hear that youth is happiness - - Byron 235 

— ye hear the children weeping - - - Bro. 338 

— you ask what the birds say? - - - - Col. 164 

— you grieve no costly offering - - - Pro. 126 

— you know the Old Man of the Sea - - Hoi. 151 

— you know the truth now up in heaven - Fav. 402 

— you not hear the aziola cry? - - - She. 440 

— you think of me as I think of you - - Bro. 287 



Doctor ion 

Down 10KJ 

Doctor of phisifc, Tale of the - - - - Cha, 364 

Doctrinal hymns ------ Wes. 159 

Dodsworth, Mr. Roger - Moore 628 

Does haughty Gaul invasion threat? - - Burns 282 

Does not divide the Sunday from the week - Sha. 812 

— the harp of Rosa slumber?- - Moore 81 
Dog and the water-lily ----- Cow. 455 

— Incident of a ------ Wor. 420 

Dogberry, a constable, c. in Much Ado about N. Sha. Ill 

Dogmatic teachers — a sonnet - - - Wor. 240 

Dolabella, Mend of Caesar, c. in Ant. and Cleo. Sha. 911 

Dole of Jarl ThorkeU, The - - - . - Whi. 332 

Doleful lay of Clorinda ----- Spe. 631 

DoU Tearsheet, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - - Sha. 409 

Dolores, c. in Spanish Student - - - - Lon. 44 

Domestic happiness, thou only bliss - - Cow. 285 

— love. (Croly.) - - - - - - Fav. 29 

— love, not in proud palace - Fav. 29 

— peace -------- Col. 44 

— pieces - - - Byron 222 

— poems -------- Hood 393 

Dominant, The - P. of F. 42 

Dominion -------- Ing. 397 

Domitius, Enobarbus ----- Sha. 911 

Don Adriano de Arniado, c. in Love's L. L. - Sha. 135 

— Carlos, c. in Spanish Student - - - Lon. 44 

— Garzia - Rog. 80 

— John, c. in Much Ado about Nothing - Sha. Ill 

— Juan ------- Byron 316 

— Pedro, c. in Much Ado about Nothing - Sha. Ill 

— Roderick, Vision of Scott 162 

— Sebastian, Prologue to Dry. 503 

Donalbain, c. in Macbeth Sha. 788 

Donald and Flora, " Remarks on - - - Burns 331 

— Brodie met a lass ----- Burns 276 

— Caird's come again ----- Scott 416 

— Dhu, Pibroch of Scott 400 

Done to death by slanderous tongues - - Sha. 132 

Donkey and his panniers - - - - Moore 637 

Donna leggiadra il cui bel nome - - - Mil. 471 

— Teresa, an orphan, c. in Remorse - - Col. 310 
Donne John, Satires of Pope 496 

— John, To ------- Her. 589 

Donnerdale, Plain of — a sonnet - - - Wor. 331 

Don't you smell fire ? - Hood 569 

Doom of Devorgoil — a play - Scott 523 

Doomed as I am in solitude - Cow. 38 

— as we are our native dust - Wor. 295 

Doomsday - - - Her. 290 

Doom Banks of — a song ----- Burns 203 



m Doctor 

Down 

Doorstep, The. (E. C. Stedman.) - - - Fav. 438 

Dora --------- Ten. 69 

— To nry daughter ------ Wor. 158 

Dorcas, a shepherdess, c. in Winter's Tale - Sha. 304 

Dorchester giant, The ----- Hoi. 7 

Dormi Jesu ! mater ridet - Col. 199 

Dorothea. (Hermann and Dorothea, vii.) - Goe. 339 

Dorothy Q. — a family portrait - - - Hoi. 213 

Dorset, duke of, To the - Byron 137 

— earl of, Imitations of - - - - - Pope 448 

— Marquis of, c. in Richard hi. - Sha. 556 

— the grace of the courts - Pope 342 

— whose early steps with mine have - Byron 137 
Dosnt thou 'ear my 'erses legs - Ten. 441 
Dost thou idly ask ?------ Bry . 61 

— thou remember? - Moore 524 

— thou see on the rampart's height - - - Lon. 379 

— thou weep, mourning mother - - - Bro. 290 
Dotage - - - - - ' - - - - Her. 268 
Doth not a meeting like this - - - - Moore 274 
Double damnation. (Peter Bell the Third.) - She. 313 

— headed snake of Newbury - Whi. 228 

— transformation — a tale ----- Gol. 123 
Doubling and doubling with laborious - - Wor. 386 
Doubt, For one in ----- - Wes. 311 

— thou the stars are fire - Sha. 821 
Doubters and the lovers — a sonnet - - - Goe. 220 
Doubting heart, A ----- - Pro. 47 

Doubtless an epoch important - Sch. 265 

— sweet girl ! the hissing lead - - - Byron 142 
Douglas Bay, On entering ----- Wor. 402 

— Douglas, "tender and true. (Mulock.) - Fav. 402 

— Earl of (Archibald), c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - Sha. 382 
Dove, John, Epitaph on - - - - - Burns 176 

— Eagle and the — an ode ----- Goe. 176 

— The - - - - - - - P. of F. 173 

Dover, At— a sonnet Wor. 306 

— Cliffs of - - Hem. 360 

— Composed near — a sonnet - Wor. 271 

— Valley of — a sonnet Wor. 305 

Doves, The - - - - - - m - - Cow. 392 

Down a broad river of the western wilds - Hem. 182 

— a swift stream — a sonnet - Wor. 374 

— by the river's bank I strayed - - - Flo. 507 

— from yon distant mountain - - - - Lon. 337 

— in the valley come meet me - - - Moore 264 

— mid the tangled roots of things - - - Low. 369 

— stream -------- Ros. 107 

— swept the chill wind - - - Low. 109 ; Flo. 291 

— the burn, Davie," Remarks on - - - Burns 308 



Down 1 3 

Dryden l6 ^ 

Down the green slope he bounded - - - Wil. 307 

— the sultry arc of day White 324 

— thou climbing sorrow Sha. 859 

— to the vale this water steers - - - Fav. 78 

Dragon, Fight with the Sch. 106 

Drama of exile— a play Bro. 182 

Dramas. See Plays. 

Dramatis personse. See characters in general 

alphabet. 

Drawn by the annual call, we now behold - Cra. 394 

Drayton. Angry violets. - - Flo. 42 

— Gilliflower, The ----- - Flo. 168 

Dread hour ! when upheaved - - - Wor. 298 

Dreaded Brama, lord of night - Goe. 142 

Dread'st thou the aspect of death? - - Sch. 249 
Dream, A - Bry. 197; Burns 84; Cam. 167; Mer. 279 

Moore 100 ; Poe 166 ; Pro. 85. 

— land Poe 94 

— life Pro. 250 

— of antiquity - Moore 138 

— of Argyle, The. (E. H. W.) - Whi. 394 

— of Eugene Aram - Hood 98 

— of fair women ------ Ten. 49 

— of Pio Nino ------- Whi. 189 

— of summer ------- Whi. 109 

— of turtle - - Moore 636 

— On a — a sonnet ----- Keats 247 

— The -------- Byron 203 

— The - - - Ing. 517 

— within a dream ------ Poe 93 

Dreamer, The Hem. 367 

Dreaming Child Hem. 22Q 

Dreams Moore 196 

— Land of - Hem. 233 

— that came true ------ Ing. 199 

— which are the children - Sha. 717 
Dress, Leveling distinction of - - - - Gol. 443 
Drest in a little brief authority - Sha. 74 
Drew, Sarah, Epitaphs on - Pope 386 
Drink deep or taste not ----- - Pope 46 

— of this cup ------ Moore 263 

— of this cup— Osiris sips - Moore 669 

— oh youth, joy's purest ray - Goe. 40 

— to her - Moore 226 

— ye to her — a song Cam. 208 

Drinking song - Lon. 89 

— song of Munich Cam. 255 

Driven in by autumn's sharpening air - - Wor. 133 

Driving cloud, To the ----- Lon. 85 

Dromio, of Ephesus, c. in Comedy of Errors Sha. 93 



133 



Down 
Dryden 



Dromio of Syracuse, c. in Comedy of Errors - Sha. 93 

Drop down below the orbed sea - Mer. 445 

— drop from the leaves of lign aloes - - Ing. 511 

— forgiveness from heaven like dew - - Fav. 402 

— of dew, The (anon.) - Flo. 350 
Dropmore, Written at - - - - - Rog. 345 
Drops of nectar ------- Goe. 247 

— that sacred pity Sha. 214 

Drovers, The ------- Whi. 114 

Drown, Daniel A. Eose by the wayside - Fav. 280 

To a friend- ------ Fav. 170 

Druid chorus on the landing of Romans - Hem. 240 

Druidical excommunication — a sonnet - - Wor. 355 

Druids, Trepidation of the — a sonnet - - Wor. 354 

Drumlanrig, Destruction of woods near - - Burns 146 

Drunken sailor on a mast - - - Sha. 575 

Drury Lane theater, At opening of - - Byron 249 

Dry as the remainder biscuit - - - Sha. 213 

— tears for holy Eva ------ Whi. 166 

DRYDEN, JOHN, Poems of: 



Absalom and Achitophel . . 86 
Albion and Albanius, Prologue to 501 

Epilogue to ... . 521 

Albumazar, Prologue to . . 509 
Alexander's Feast— an ode . . 527 
" All for Love "—an epilogue . 516 
"Amboyna." Prologue to . .482 

— An epilogue .... 514 
Aniyntas, Death of— an elegy . 312 
Annus Mirabilis. (1666.) . . 47 
Arviragus and Philicia, Prologue 

to 502 

Astrea Redux 29 

Aurengezebe, Prologue to . . 486 
Boccaccio. Translations from . 434 
Britannia Rediviva . . . 258 
Caesar Borgia. Prologue to . . 490 
Castlemain, Lady, To 271 

Character of a Good Parson . 430 
Charles the Second, To . . 37 

— A prologue 413 

Charleston. Dr., To . . . 270 
Chaucer, Tales from . . .321 
Circe. Prologue to 485 
Cock and the Fox . . . .383 
Congreve, Mr., To . .281 
Conquest of Granada— an epi- 
logue 513 

Cromwell. Oliver, Death of . .22 
Cymon and Iphigenia . . 462 
Death of a young gentleman . 315 
Don Sebastian, Prologue to . 503 
Dryden, John, To his kinsman . 286 
Duchess of York, To the . 45, 276 
Dundee, Earl of, Death of . .300 
Earl of Essex, Prologue to . 495 
Elegies and Epitaphs . . . 295 
Eleonora— a panegyric . . 301 

Epilogues 511 

Epistles 267 

Epitaphs: Dundee. Earl of, On . 300 

— Fairbone, Sir Palme's, On . 318 



Epitaphs: Frampton. Mary, On . 318 

— Paston, Mrs. Margaret . . 319 

— Rogers, Master. On . . . 316 

— Whitmore, Lady, On .317 

— Winchester, Marquis of, On . 320 
Etherage, George, To . . 277 
Fair Stranger, The— a song . . 535 

— Young Lady, To a . . . 541 
Fairbone's Tomb. Epitaph on . 318 
Flower and the Leaf ... 403 
Frampton, Mary, On monument 

of 318 

Granville, Mr., To . . . .283 
Hastings, Lord, Death of . . 19 
Henry the Second— an epilogue . 522 
Higden. Henry, To . . .280 
Hind and the Panther . . .193 
Hoddesdon, To his friend . . 22 
Howard. Robert, To 267 

Husband his own Cuckold— an 

epilogue 524 

Hyde. Edward, To . . . 40 
Incantation in " CEdipus " . .553 
Indian Emperor "—an epilogue 511 

511 

296 



Queen,"— Prologue to 

— Queen, Epilogue to 
Killigrew, Mrs. Anne, Ode to 
King and Queen, To the— a pro- 
logue 

— Arthur," Prologue to . 
King's House, For the — an epi- 
logue 

Spoken the first day after 



497 
507 



519 



the fire . . '. .481 
Kneller, Godfrey, To . 291 
Lee, Mr., To . . . . . 273 
"Limberham," Prologue to .487 
•'Love Triumphant," Song in . 559 
■• Loyal Brother," Prologue to . 496 
MacFlecknoe . . . .175 
•'Man of Mode, The"— an epi- 
logue 515 



Dryden 
Each. 



134 



Martin Marr-all, Prologue to . 479 
May Queen, The .... 539 
Medal, The— a satire . . .144 
Milton, Under portrait of . . 320 
"Mistakes, The," Prologue to . 506 
" Mithridates, King of Pontus " — 

an epilogue .... 517 
Motteux, Mr., To . . . .284 
New House, Spoken at opening 

of the 483 

Northleigh, Sonnet to . . 267 

Odes and Songs .... 527 
" CEdipus "—an epilogue . .518 

— Incantation in . . 553 

— Prologue to 488 

Oldham, Mr., To memory of . 295 
Ormond, Duchess of, To . . 321 
Oxford, Spoken at — an epilogue 521 

— University, To, Prologues 484, 493 

498 
Palamon and Arcite . . . 325 
Paston, Margaret, Epitaph on . 319 
" Pilgrim, The " — an epilogue .525 

— Prologue to ... . 509 
Prologues and Epilogues . . 477 
" Prophetess, The," Prologue to 504 
Purcell, Mr., Death of . . . 316 
Religio Laici; or, A Layman's 

Faith 155 

Rival Ladies, The, Prologue to . 477 
Rogers, Master, Epitaph on . . 316 
Roscommon, Earl of, To . . 274 
Saint Cecilia's Day— a song . . £33 



Satire on the Dutch . 
Scholar and his Mistress 
Sea-fight in " Amboyna " — a song 
Secular Masque, The 
Sigismonda and Guiscardo 
"Silent Woman," At acting of — 

an epilogue 
Song in " Love Triumphant " 

— in the Maiden Queen " . 
Songs in "Albion and Alba- 

nius" 

— in " Conquest of Granada " . 

— in " Indian Emperor " . . . 

— in " King Arthur " . 
Sonnet: Northleigh, To 

" Sophonisba,", Prologue to 
Southern, Mr., To . 
Tales from Chaucer . 
"Tempest, The," Prologue to 
Theodore and Honoria 
Threnodia Augustalis . 
Translations from Boccaccio . 
" Troilus and Cressida," Prologue 

to . 
" Tyrannic Love," Prologue to . 
Veni Creator Spiritus . 
Whitmore, Lady, Epitaph on 
Wife of Bath .... 
" Wild Gallant," Epilogue to 
Winchester, Marquis of, Epitaph 

on 

York, Duchess of, To . 45, 
Young Statesman, On the . 



44 
548 
552 
543 
434 

520 
559 
550 

554 
551 
550 
556 
267 
491 
279 
321 
480 
452 
181 
434 



481 
542 
317 
417 
512 

320 

276 
536 



Dryden, John. Ode on Cecilia's Day 

To his kinsman - 

Dryden's epigram on Milton translated - 
Dualisms ------- 

Dubardieu, c. in Good-natured Man 
Dubois Crance, c. in Fall of Eobespierre 
Duchess May, Ehyme of the 

— of York, To the - 

Duddon, Eiver — a series of sonnets - 
Dudevant, Madame A. D. , Sonnets to - 
Duel of Menalaus and Paris 
Duet— Black Knight and Wamba ■ 
Duke, in exile, c. in As You Like It - 
Dukes. See surnames in general alphabet. 
Dull, a constable, c. in Love's Labor's Lost 
Duller should'st thou be than 
Dullness --.____ 
Dum librata suis hserit radicibus ilex- 

— longi lentique gemis sub pond ere morbi 
Dumain, a lord, c. in Love's Labor's Lost 
Dumb orators, The - 

Dumbarton Drums, beat bonny, O 

— Drums," Remarks on - 
Dumfries volunteers — a song 
Dumourier, general, Welcome to — a song 
Dunbar, Earl of, c. in Auchindrane 



- Fav. 101 
Dry. 286 

- Cow. 599 

Ten. 474 

- Gol. 178 
Col. 400 

- Bro. 276 
Dry. 45, 276 

- Wor. 326 
Bro. 88, 89 

- Iliad 97 
Scott 422 

- Sha. 205 

- Sha. 135 
Sha. 817 

- Her. 207 
Her. 544 

- Her. 587 
Sha. 135 

- Cra. 1 
Burns 320 
Burns 319 
Burns 282 
Burns 252 

Scott 494 



135 %Ht n 

Dunbar, William, Letters to Burns 369, 404, 449, 461, 505 
Duncan Gray — a song - Burns 243, 319 

— c. in Macbeth ------- Sha. 788 

Dunciad, The - Pope 118 

Dundas, Robert, Death of - - - - Burns 111 

Dundee, Burial-march of Ayt. 71 

— earl of, Death of ----- - Dry. 300 

— Viscount of - - - - - - - Ayt. 202 

Dunker's, Hymn of the - Whi. 407 

Dunlop, Mrs., Sketch of- - - - - Burns 123 

— Mrs. , Letters to. See Letters. 

Dunois, Bomance of ----- Scott 397 

Dunolly castle, On revisiting - Wor. 404 

— eagle, The — a sonnet ----- Wor. 404 

Durastanti, Sung by ----- - Pope 374 

D'Urfey's last play, Prologue for - Pope 370 

During a heavy storm it chanced - Goe. 242 

Durward, a palmer, c. in Doom of Devorgoil Scott 524 

Dusk-haired and golden-robed o'er the golden Eos. 155 

Dust are our frames; and, gilded dust - Ten. 357 

— as we are, the immortal spirit grows - - Wor. 505 

— to its narrow house beneath - Hem. 489 

— unto dust, to this all must - Scott 423 
Dutch picture, A ----- - Lon. 373 

Duty, Love and ------- Ten. 85 

— Ode to ------- Wor. 421 

— surviving self-love ------ Col. 211 

Dweller in yon dungeon dark - - - Burns 116 

Dwelling in marvelous pavilions - P. of F, 104 

Dwells in the soul of every artist - Pro, 189 

Dwindle, peak and pine ----- Sha, 389 

Dyer, John, To — a sonnet - Wor. 229 

Dying alchemist, The - - Wil. 211 ; Fav. 153 

— bard, The ------- Scott 375 

— bard's prophecy, The ----- Hem. 250 

— Christian to his soul ----- Pope 359 

— gypsy's dirge ------- Scott 399 

— improvisatore, The ----- Hem. 364 

— rosebud, The. (Mrs. Osgood.) - - - Flo. 97 

— swan, The ------ Ten. 18 

E , To - Byron 130 

E. B., To Lady Wor. 243 

E Giovine il signore ------ Eos. 141 

Each and all Erne. 14; Fav. 384 

— creature holds an insular point - - - Bro. 91 

— glad to be, each in its kind so fair - - P. of F. 121 

— hath such lordship as the loftiest - - Arm 147 

— heart has its haunted chamber- - - Lon. 228 

— hour until we meet is as a bird - - - Eos, 239 



Each 1QA 

E'en 10D 

Each in his narrow cell forever laid - - Fav. 30 

— man his prison makes ----- Arn. 146 

— man's life the outcome of his former - Arn. 151 

— one when seen by himself - Sch. 268 

— particular hair to stand on end - - Sha. 817 

— road to the proper end ----- Goe. 224 

— spot where tulips prank their state - - Erne. 247 

— weapon rests, war's tumults cease - - Sch. 347 

— the herald is who wrote - Erne. 75 
Eagle and dove — an ode ----- Goe. 176 

— suffers little birds to sing - Sha. 706 

— The— a fragment - - - - - Ten. 118 

— why soarest thou above that tomb? - - She. 533 
Eagles — a sonnet ------ Wor. 385 

— quill from Lake Superior - - - - Whi. 141 
Earl March looked on his dying child - - Cam. 252 

— of Essex, The," Prologue to - - - Dry. 495 
Earlier poems ----- Hoi. 1 ; Lon. 6 
Earls. See surnames in general alphabet. 

— picture, For an Burns 103 

— return, The ------- Mer. 403 

Early morning — a sonnet. (Miss Starr.) - Flo. 407 

— one day, the muse when eagerly - - Goe. 271 

— village cock hath twice ----- Sha. 589 

— within his work-shop here - Goe. 209 
Earth --------- Bry. 160 

— and hell thy law opposes - - - - Wes. 174 

— and her praisers Bro. 59 

— Division of the ------ Sch. 187 

— guard what here we lay - Hem. 376 

— has no sorrow that heaven cannot - - Moore 348 

— has not anything to show more fair - - Wor. 241 

— hath bubbles as the water has - - - Sha. 789 

— Invocation to the ------ "Wor. 493 

-mother of aU ------ She. 522 

— ocean, air, beloved brotherhood - - - She. 84 
Earthed up here lies an imp o' hell - - Burns 183 
Earthly arms no more uphold him. (E. H. W.) Whi. 394 

— gods— my lyre shall win - Sch. 324 
Earthquake, Sura of the - - - - P. of F. 120 
Earth's children cleave to earth - - - Bry. 176 

— noblest, thing a woman perfected - - Low. 4 
Ease is the weary merchant's prayer - - Cow. 534 

East Indian, The - Moore 656 

Easter Her. 123 

— day, For Wes. 64 

— wings Her. 125 

Easy it is of a cut loaf to steal a shive - - Sha. 693 

Eat thou and drink, to-morrow thou - - Ros. 262 

Eaten on the insane root Mac. 790 



13? 



Each 
E'en 



Eating the bitter bread of banishment - - Sha. 368 

Eberhard, Count ------- Sen. 54 

Ecce pererratas, regum doctissinie, nugas - Her. 579 

— recedentis fcecundo in littore Nili - - Her. 558 
Eccentric drama, Fragment of an - - White 248 
Ecclesiastes, Hymn on passage in - Wes. 286 
Ecclesiastical sonnets ----- Wor. 354 

Echard, Vision of Whi. 399 

Echo --------- Moore 266 

— and Narcissus. (Milton.) - Flo. 47 

— the lap-dog, On ----- Burns 181 

— upon the Gemmi — a sonnet - Wor. 303 
Echoes -------- p ra 28 

Eclipse of the sun, 1820 ----- Wor. 300 

Eclogue on death of Sir Philip Sidney - - Spe. 636 

Eclogues of the Shepherd's Calendar - - Spe. 517 

Eden bower - - - - - - - Eos. 27 

— river, Cumberland — a sonnet - - - Wor. 408 
Edenhall, Luck of ----- Lon. 28 
Edgar, son of Gloucester, c. in King Lear - Sha. 847 
Edina ! Scotia's darling seat ! -'-.'- Burns 101 
Edinburgh, Address to - Burns 101 

— after Flodden ------ Ayt. 12 

— duke of, Welcome to - Ten. 535 
Edith ; a tale of the woods - Hem. 170 

— ward of Edward, c. in Harold - - - Ten. 615 
Editor, Letter to an - White 102 

— of "Morning Chronicle," Letter to - Burns 504 

— of "The Star," Letter to - - - - Burns 420 
Edmund, c. in King Lear ----- Sha. 847 

— duke of Buckingham, Epitaph on - - Pope 348 

— earl of Eutland, c. in Henry vi., part 3 - Sha. 526 

— of Langley, c. in Eichard ii. - - - Sha. 356 

— thy grave with aching eye I scan - - Col. 46 
Education forms the common mind - - Pope 228 

— of youth — an essay ----- Gol. 401 
Edward III. of England, c. in Halidon Hill - Scott 462 

— IV., c. in Eichard iii. ----- Sha. 556 

— VI.— a sonnet ------ Wor. 368 

— earl of March (Edward IV.), c. in Henry 

vi., pt. 3 - - - - - - - Sha. 526 

— Gray Ten. 107 

— prince of Wales, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - Sha. 526 

— prince of Wales, c. in Eichard iii. - - Sha. 556 

— Shore Cra. 104 

— the black prince, To Scott 414 

— the Confessor, c. in Harold - - - Ten. 615 
Edwin, earl of Mercia, c. in Harold - - - Ten. 615 

— Morris ; or the Lake ----- Ten. 75 
E'en as the bird, who midst the leafy bower Dante 321 



Eliot 138 

E'en copious Dryden wanted - - - Pope • 306 

— have you seen, bathed in the morning - G-ol. 176 

— Palinurus nodded at the helm - - - Pope 187 
Ef I a song or two could make - Low. 277 
Effects at a distance — a ballad - - - Goe. 128 
Effigies, The ------- Hem. 415 

Effulgence of my glory, Son beloved - - Mil. 151 

Effusion at Altorf ------ Wor. 297 

— in a pleasure ground ----- Wor. 2Q6 
Eftsoones they heard a most melodious sound Spe. 194 
Egerton, Alice, c. in Comus - - - - Mil. 434 

— Thomas, c. in Comus - - - - Mil. 434 
Egeus, c. in Midsummer Night's Dream - Sha. 161 
Eglamor, agent, c. in Two Gent, of Yerona - Sha. 21 
Eglantine and waterfall ----- Wor. 142 

— Tulip and- ------- Flo. 462 

Eglinton, earl of, Letter to Burns 363 

Egmont, Song from ------ Goe. 406 

Egotisms from my own sensations - - Burns 582 

Egregiously an ass - - - - . - - Sha. 888 

Egremond, Boy of ----- - Eog. 240 

Egremont castle, Horn of - - - - - Wor. 455 

Egyptian maid, The Wor. 321 

Ehrenberg, Christian G., To - - - - Hoi. 264 

Eighty years have passed, and more - - Hoi. 154 

Em feste burg ist unser Gott - Whi. 262 

Einar Tamberskelver Lon. 261 

Ejaculation— a sonnet Wor. 381 

El Ghor, Rock in Whi. 244 

Elaine— an idyl . - Ten. 302 

Elayne le Blanc Mer. 447 

Llbingerode, In an album at - Col. 170 
Elbow, a simple constable, c. in Meas. for 

Meas. ------- Sha. 67 

Eldad, they said, and Medad there - - - Wes. 170 

Eldest born of powers divine ! - - Cow. 515 

Eldorado _ Poe 98 

Eldred, a peasant, c. in The Borderers - - Wor. 43 

Eleanor, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 496 

— wife of Eldred, c. in The Borderers - - Wor. 43 

— wife of Oswald, c. in Doom of Devorgoil - Scott 524 
Eleanore -------- Ten. 26 

Elected knight, The ------ Lon. 29 

Election, Eve of Whi. 236 

— The - - Cra. 346 

Electra, c. in Clytemnestra - Mer. 348 

Electric essence permeates the air - - - Fav. 289 

Electricity is the breath of God— an acrostic Fav. 289 

Elegance floats about thee like a dress - - Wil. 291 

Elegant as simplicity and warm as ecstasy - Cow. 144 



139 



E'en 
Eliot 



Elegiac stanzas, Lon. 398, 409 ; Moore 73, 



Elegies and epitaphs - 

— in Latin ------ 

— on death of Sir Philip Sidney 

— Roman ------- 

Elegy imitated from Akenside - 

— in a country churchyard. (Gray.) - 

— on captain Matthew Henderson - 

— on death of Dr. W. E. Channing 

— on death of Mr. Gill 

— on death of Sir J. H. Blair 

— on death of Robert Dundas - 

— on death of Robert Ruisseaux - 

— on death of young man - 

— on Miss Burnet of Monboddo - 

— on Newstead Abbey - 

— on Peg Nicholson ... - 

— on the death of a mad dog - 

— on the year 1788 ----- 

— or friend's passion for his Astrophel - 

— The, " Lament in rhyme - 

— to an unfortunate lady - 

— written in spring. (M. Bruce.) 

Elena della Torre 

Eleonora — a panegyric - 

Eleusinian festival - 
Elgin marbles, Sonnet on the 

Elidure, Artegal and 

Elinor, mother of John, c. in King John 
ELIOT, GEORGE (pseud, of Mrs. Cross), 



9, 106 ; Ten. 461 

Wor. 304 

- Dry. 295 

Mil. 513 

• Spe. 628, 638 

Goe. 279 

- Col. 204 
Fav. 30 

Burns 128 

- Low. 104 
White 72 

- Burns 107 
Burns 111 

- Burns 38 

- Sch. 35 

- Burns 134 
Byron 159 

- Burns 127 

- Gol. 128 

- Burns 115 

- Spe. 638 

- Burns 36 

- Pope 90 

- Fav. 315 

- Tay. 232 

- Dry. 301 

- Sch. 132 

- Keats 251 

- Wor. 98 

Sha. 332 
Poems of: 



Agatha 

All things journey: sun and moon 
And I am lonely .... 

Arion 

Armgart— a play .... 
Bright, O Bright Fedalma 
Brother and Sister .... 
— hear and take the curse 
Came a pretty maid— a song 
Characters: Amador, Don 

Spanish Gypsy 
Armgart 

Spanish Gypsy 



— Armgart 

— Arias 

— Blasco . 

— Enriques . 

— Fabian . 

— Fedalma . 

— Graf Dornberg 

— Grahn, Doctor 

— Hernando 

— Hinda 

— Hurtado 
— Jose . 

— Juan 

— Leo . 

— Lopez . 



Armgart 
Spanish Gypsy 



. Armgart 
Spanish Gypsy 



25 

m 

244 
137 
36 
166 

97 
: 
214 

267 

36 

26S 

154 

266 

266 

192 

36 

55 

266 

283 

267 

266 

153 

30 

160 



Characters: Lorenzo Span. Gyp. 271 

— Nadar ..." ^ 330 

— Pablo. ..." " 179 

— Pepita ..." " 211 

— Roldan ..." " 156 
— Sephardo . . " " 249 

— Silva, Don . " " 184 

— Walpurga, Fraulein Armgart 36 

— Zarca . . Spanish Gypsy 218 
College Breakfast Party . . 106 
Day is Dying! Float, O Song . 180 
Death of Moses . . . .133 
Gypsy, Spanish .... 141 
How Lisa loved the King . . 73 
It was in the prime . . . 179 
Jubal, Legend of . . . .5 
Maiden crowned with glossy 

blackness .... 166 
Memory tell me— a song . . 212 
Minor Prophet, A . . . .89 
O bird that used to press . . 245 

— may I join the choir invisible . 139 
Plays: Armgart .... 36 

— Spanish Gypsy . . . .141 
Push off the Boat— a song . . 314 
Self and Life . . . . .129 



Eliot's 
Emerson 



140 



Should I long that dark were fair 164 
Spanish Gypsy— a ple.y . . 141 
Spring comes hither— a song . 176 
Stradivarius 102 

Eliot's oak— a sonnet - 

Elisabetta Sirani 

Elixir, The - 

Eliza — a song - 

— To - 

Elizabeth 



Sweet evenings come and go, love 132 
The world is great . . . 244 
There was a holy hermit— a song 265 
Two Lovers 127 



- Lon. 
Mer. 

- Her. 
Burns 
Byron 

Lon. 

— a c. in Faust ------- Faust 

— a princess, c. in Queen Mary - - . - Ten. 

— Queen — a sonnet ------ Wor. 

— queen of Edward IV., c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 
Elle etait de ce monde ou les plus - - - Flo. 
Ellen Irwin, or Braes of Kirtle - Wor. 

— Orford Cra. 

— To - Erne. 

Elliot, E. Flowers for the heart - - - Flo. 

— Ebenezer, Poem on Whi. 

Ellis, Sir Henry, Memory of - - - Hem. 

Elm sylph, The. (H.W.Parker.) - - Flo. 

— tree, The Hood 

— Written beneath an - Byron 
Elmina, c. in Siege of Valencia - - - Hem. 
Elms of New Haven ... Wil. 
Eloisa to Abelard ------ Pope 

Elphinstone's translations of Martial - - Burns 
Elsie, King Volmer and - Whi. 

Elspeth's ballad ------ Scott 

Elton. The rose- ------ Flo. 

Ely, Bishop of, c. in Henry v. Sha. 

— Bishop of (Morton), c. in Richard iii. - - Sha. 

— bishop of, Death of. (Milton.) - - Cow. 
Elysium ----- Hem. 313; Sch. 
Emancipation celebration, Hymn for - - Whi. 

— convention of 1840 - - - - - Whi. 

— proclamation, Hymn after the - - - Hoi. 
Embassy to Achilles ----.. Iliad 
Ember picture, An Low. 

Scott 

White 

Flo. 

- Col. 
Erne. 



Emblems of England's ancient faith 
— of life ! see changeful April - 
Emblems of flowers. (Burns.) 
Emerick, king of Illyria, c. in Zapolya - 
Emerson, Edward Bliss. In memoriam 
EMERSON, RALPH WALDO, Poems op: 

Adirondaeks, The— a journal . 159 
iEolian harp, Maiden speech of 220 
Alphonso of Castile . . .27 
Amulet, The .... 88 

Apology, The 105 

April 219 



381 
469 
288 
200 
157 
299 

22 
537 
370 
556 
354 
254 
447 

86 
522 
146 
332 
498 

82 
176 
434 
104 
109 
179 
377 
403 
103 
439 
556 
574 

43 
357 

57 
253 
202 
373 
393 
346 
515 
230 
225 



Art 285 

Astraea 75 

Bacchus ...... Ill 

Battle monument, On completion 

of 130 

Beauty 233 



141 



Eliot's 
Emerson 



Beauty, Ode to .... 81 

Berrying 41 

Birds 283 

Blight 122 

Bohemian hymn .... 298 
Boston— Dec. 16, 1873 . . .182 

— hymn, 1863 .... 174 

Brahma . . . . . .170 

Carlisle, Alphonso of . . . 27 

Celestial love 101 

Channing, "William Henry, Ode 

to 71 

Character 231 

Chartist's complaint, The . . 197 

Circles 287 

Compensation . . . .77, 229 
Concord hymn, 1833 . . .139 

Culture 232 

Cupido 221 

Daemonic love, The . . .97 
Days 196 

— ration, The 121 

Destiny 32 

Dirge— Concord, 1838 . . .127 
Each and all .... 14 

Ellen, To 86 

Emerson, E. B. In memoriam 225 
Enchanter, The . . . .313 
Epigrams: Letters . . .188 

— Quatrains 23S 

— Bethink poor heart what bitter 246 
Eros— epigrams ... 89, 300 
Etienne de la Bo6ce . . .76 

Eva. To 87 

Exile. The (from the Persian) 245, 315 

Experience 228 

Fable : Mountain and squirrel . 71 

Fame 311 

Fate 171 

Forbearance .... 78 

Forerunners 79 

Fragments on nature and life . 278 

— on the poet and the poetic gift 263 

Freedom 172 

Friendship . . . . .232 
Give all to love .... 84 
Goethe, Written in a volume . 313 

Good-by 37 

Grace 299 

Guy 33 

Hamatreya 35 

Harp, The 203 

Hermione 89 

Heroism 231 

Holidays 119 

Humble-bee, The . . . .39 
Hymn at ordination of C. Rob- 
bins 192 

In memoriam— E. B. Emerson . 224 

Initial love 92 

Inscription for a well . . . 315 
Last farewell, The .... 222 
Letters— an epigram ... 188 
Life, Fragments on 287 

Limits 314 

Love, Celestial . . . .101 

— Daemonic 97 

— Epigram on .... 242 

— Give all to .... 84 

— Initial 92 

Maiden speech of ^Eohan harp 220 



Manners 234 

May-day 143 

— morning 304 

Merlin 106, 109 

Merops 113 



Michelangelo, Sonnet of 
Miracle, The . 
Mithridates .... 
Monadnoc 

— from afar 
Mountain and squirrel . 
Musketaquid 

My garden 

Naples, Written in, 1833 . 

Nature .... 

— and life, Fragments on . 
Song of 



Nun's aspiration. The 
Ode— July 4, 1857 . 

— to beauty -. . . . 

— to William Henry Channing 

Pan 

Park. The .... 
Past. The .... 
Peter's field .... 
Philosopher .... 
Poet, The 



Politics 

Prayer 

Problem, The 

Quatrains 

Rhea, To ... . 

Rhodora, The . 

Robbins, Chandler, Ordination 

Romany girl, The 

Rome, Written at, 1833 . 

Rubies 

Saadi 

Sea-shore .... 

Snow-storm, The . 

Solution .... 

Song of nature 

— of Seyd Nimetollah 

Sonnets. Trans, of Michelangelo 

South wind, The . 

Sphinx, The . 

Spiritual laws 

Sunrise .... 

Sursum corda 

Terminus .... 

Test, The 

Thine eyes still shined . 

Threnody 

Titmouse .... 

Translations 

Two rivers 

Unity .... 

Uriel 

Visit, The . 

Voluntaries 

W.;J., To . 

Waldeinsamkeit 

Walden 

Walk, The 

Water .... 

Waterfall, The 

Webster, Daniel, 1834 . 

Woodnotes 

World-soul, The . 

Worship .... 

Xenophanes . 



244 

. 305 

30 

. 58 

310 
. 71 

124 
. 197 

300 
. 193 

278 
. 209 

217 

. 173 

81 

. 71 



78 
221 



314 
2T3 

230 
299 

15 
238 

18 
. 39 
of 192 
195 
301 
188 
114 
207 

42 
189 
209 
249 
244 
310 



. 285 



216 

189 



200 
244 
213 



. 178 

31 

. 214 

307 

. 304 

284 

. 307 

312 

43,48 



120 



Emerson 149 

Epigrams J-tt^/ 

Emerson, Ralph W. Each and All - - Fav. 384 

Rhodora, The ----- - Flo. 530 

Snow-storm, The - - - Flo. 293 ; Fav. 43 

Emigrant French clergy — a sonnet - - - Wor. 379 

— mother, The - Wor. 114 

Emigrants, Departure of - - - - - Cam. 256 

Emigration, Song of Hem. 215 

— Sura of the - - - - - - P. of F. 162 

Emilia, a lady attendant, c. in Winter's Tale Sha. 304 

— wife of Iago, c. in Othello - Sha. 879 
Emma and Eginhard ----- Lon. 295 

— To - - - - - -""'-.- Byron 134 

— To- - Sch. 104 

— L , To ------ Byron 256 

Emperor, emperor ! - - - - - - Bro. 342 

Emperors and kings, how oft have temples - Wor. 287 

— bird's-nest ------- Lon. 215 

— glove, The - - Lon. 376 

Employment - Her. 140, 164 

Empty purse, To his - Cha. 601 

En quse prodigia, ex oris allata remotis - Cow. 506 

Enamored, artless, young — a sonnet - - Cow. 598 

Enceladus- ------- Lon. 226 

Enchanter, The ------- Erne. 313 

Enchantress, farewell, who so oft - - Scott 440 

Enclosed in a tumultuous privacy of storm - Erne. 42 

End of Krishna's trial - - - - - I. S. S. 59 

Endurance, foresight, strength and skill - Wor. 171 

Endure the toothache patiently - - - Sha. 129 

Endymion Lon. 36 

— a romance ------- Keats 5 

Engelberg, hill of the angels - Wor. 296 

Enghien, due d', Disinterment of - - - Wor. 286 

Engineer hoist with his own petard - - - Sha. 833 

England, Farewell to - Byron 236 

— hails thee with emotion - Cam. 316 

— Homes of Hem. 385 

— In -------- Mer. 238 

— in 1819 - She. 415 

— the time is come — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 273 

— To the reformers of - Whi. 97 

— with all thy faults I love thee still - - Cow. 270 

England's dead Hem. 325 

English bards and Scotch reviewers - Byron 177 

— clergy and popular preachers - - - G-ol. 458 

— friend, To an - - Hoi. 126 

— idyls -------- Ten. 59 

— poets, Remarks on White 416 

— reformers in exile — a sonnet - - - Wor. 370 

— soldier's song of memory - Hem. 379 



-j i o Emerson 

± ^ to Epigrams 

English war-song Ten. 473 

Englishmen, To - Whi. 264 

Enid— an idyl - - - - - - - Ten. 254 

Enigma, An - - - - - - - Cow. 601 

— An — a sonnet ------ p e 79 

Enixas pueros mat res se sister e templis - - Her. 564 

Enlightened teacher, gladly from thy hand Wor. 250 

Enmity be between ye ! Your union - - Sch. 262 

Enoch Arden ------- Ten. 340 

Enough, for see, with dim association - - Wor. 364 

— of climbing toil ! - - - - - - Wor. 426 

— of garlands, of the Arcadian crook - - Wor. 385 

— of rose-bud lips and eyes - - - - Wor. 461 

— of simpering and grimace !-.--- Mer. 248 

— we're tired, my heart, my heart and I - Bro. 269 
Enraged against a quondam friend - - - Sch. 53 
Enriques, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 2Q6 
Entail, The ; or, village wife - Ten. 701 
Enter the path ! There is no grief like hate Arn. 160 
Enterprise, To ------ Wor. 196 

Enthusiast, Sonnet to an - - - - Hood 165 

Enthusiasts and French revolution - - - Wor. 190 

Entire surrender. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. 631 

Entranced I saw a vision in the cloud - - Low. 416 

Envy Pro. 214 

— On . . Cow. 522 

— will merit, as its shade, pursue - - Pope 53 

Ephesians, iv. 30 Her. 231 

Ephraim repenting Cow. 59 

Epic, The - - Ten. 59 

Epicurean, Poems from the - - - - Moore 668 

— reminiscences of a sentimentalist - - Hood 343 
Epigrams : Burns 176 ; Erne. 188, 238, 286 ; Cow. 400, 452 

497, 518, 521, 571; Goe. 222, 262, 275, 256; Moore 326 

328 

— Accept a miracle Pope 397 

— Behold ambitions of - - - - Pope 398 

— Bloomfield, Eobert, On - White 365 

— Character, A Rog. 241 

— Epitaphs, On ----- - Pope 396 

— Greek, From the - - - - Rog. 246 ; She. 533 

— Here stopped by hasty death - - - Pope 368 

— I am his highness' dog ----- Pope 396 

— in Latin - Mil. 531 

— In the lines that you sent - Pope 396 

— Letters - Erne. 188 

— Martial translated Pope 399 

— Now Europe's balanced - - - Pope 397 

— Quatrains Erne. 238 

— Radnor, lord, To - - - - - - Pope 390 



Epigrams 1 A A 

Epitaphs ^^^ 

Epigrams : Though sprightly Sappho - - Pope 399 

— translated from Owen Cow. 610 

— What god, what genius - Pope 397 

— What's fame with men - - - - - Pope 397 

— Yes, 'tis the time Pope 386 

— You heat your pate Pope 376 

Epigraphs from Scott. See Mottoes . 

Epilogue by J. Cradock Gol. 366 

— Change without term - Mer. 299 

— For Mrs. Siddons ------ Eog. 336 

— to Agamemnon ------ Tho. 475 

— to Breakfast-table series - - - Hoi. 205 

— to drama founded on St. Eonan's Well - Scott 445 

— to Rowe's Jane Shore ----- Pope 94 

— to Schiller's Song of the Bell - - - Goe. 409 

— to Shepherd's Calendar ----- Spe. 565 

— to The Appeal - Scott 415 

— to The Day Dream - ----- Ten. 105 

— to The Satires Pope 319 

— to The Seraphim ------ Bro. 24 

— to the tragedy of Ina - Moore 598 
Epilogues -------- Dry. 511 

Epimetheus - - Lon. 231 

— c. in Masque of Pandora - Lon. 344 
Epiphanias — a song ------ Goe. 99 

Epiphany, For the - - - - - - Wes. 63 

Epipsychidion ------- She. 357 

Episcopacy in America — a sonnet - - Wor. 375 

Episcopus - - - Her. 566 

Episode of Nisus and Euryalus - - - Byron 143 

Epistles - - - Dry. 267 ; Moore 110 ; Pope 333 

— Addison, Joseph, To - - - - - Pope 260 

— Aiken, Andrew, To - Burns 164 

— Augustus Caesar, To - - - - - Pope 297 

— Beaumont, Sir G. H. - - - - Wor. 445 

— Blacklock, Dr., To - - - - - Burns 171 

— Blount, Teresa, To - - - - - Pope 337, 340 

— Craggs, James, To Pope 334 

— Creech, William, To Burns 167 

— Davie, To ----- Burns 150, 160 

— Esopus to Maria Burns 141 

— Friend, To a - - - - - - Rog. 210 

— Goudie, John, To - Burns 155 

— Graham, Robert, To - - - Burns 169, 172, 174 

— Guidwife of Wauchope House, To - Burns 166 

— Hamilton, Gavin, To Burns 163 

— Horace, Imitations of - - - - Pope 277, 506 

— Jarvis, Mr., To ------ Pope 335 

— Kennedy, John, Invitation to - - Burns 163 

— Lapraik, John - Burns 152, 153, 158 



145 



Epigrams 
Epitaphs 



Epistles: Logan, major, To - - - - Burns 165 

— M'Adam, Mr., of Craigengillan - - Burns 165 

— M'Math, John, To Burns 159 

— Moral Essays - Pope 223 

— Oxford, earl of , To Pope 333 

— Parker, Hugh, To - - - - - Burns 168 

— Eankine, John, To - - - - - Burns 149 

— Scott, Mrs., of Wauchope, To - - Burns 166 

— Simpson, William, To - Burns 155 

— Smith, James, To - Burns 161 

— Tait, James, of Glenconner - - - Burns 170 
Epitaphium ------- Her. 545 

Epitaphs: Aiken, Eobert, On - - - Burns 185 

— Aretimias, On, by Heraclides - - - Cow. 515 

— As a boy, reserved and naughty - - Goe. 226 

— Astrologers, On the ----- Cow. 516 

— At threescore winters - Cow. 514 

— Atterbury, Dr. Francis, On - Pope 348 

— Bard's epitaph ------ Burns 90 

— Bethink poor heart, what bitter - - - Eme. 246 

— Burnes, William (father of Eobert) - - Burns 176 

— Burton, Mr., For ----- Bums 180 

— Bushby, John, On Burns 187 

— Butler, Samuel, On ------ Pope 350 

— Charles, earl of Dorset - Pope 342 

— Chester, Mr., On ------ Cow. 494 

— Chiabrera, Translated from - - - Wor. 486 

— Coningsby, lord, On ----- Pope 349 

— Constantine Kanaris - - - - - Ayt. 199 

— Corbet, Mrs., On ----- -Pope 345 

— Country laird, On a Burns 185 

— Cowper, On (Hayley's) - - - - White 460 

— Coxcomb, On a noted - - - Burns 186 

— Craggs, James, On - - - - - Pope 263, 343 

— Cruikshank, W., On - - Burns 187 

— Damon, To ----- - Mil. 553 

— Daughter, On a - - - - - - Burns 184 

— Digby, Robert and Mary, On Pope 345 

— Dove, John, of Mauchline - - - - Burns 176 

— Dundee, earl of , To Dry. 300 

— Echo, the lap-dog, On - - - - Burns 181 

— Edmund, duke of Buckingham - - - Pope 348 

— Epitaph, The ------ Burns 130 

— Epitaphium alterum ----- Cow. 414 

— Erskine, Mrs. , On - - - - Scott 417 

— Fairbone, Sir Palmes, On - Dry. 318 

— Fenton, Elijah, On Pope 347 

— " Fop," a dog, On Cow. 492 

— Fowler, On a, by Isiodorus - - - Cow. 517 

— Frampton, Mary, On - Dry. 318 

JO 



Epitaphs 1 A f> 

Ere - L ^ t,J 

Epitaphs: Friend, On a - - Burns 185 ; Byron 131 

— Gay, John, On - - - -"■ ' - - Pope 347 

— Good man, On a - - - - - - Cow. 517 

— Gray's elegy (in Latin) - She. 554 

— Grizzel Grim, On - Burns 180 

— Hamilton, Gavin, On - - - Burns 185 

— Harcourt, Simon, On - Pope 343 

— Hare, On a - - - - - - - Cow. 413 

— Heath, Benjamin H., On - Mac. 210 

— Here lies a man cut off by fate - Sch. 301 

— Higgins, Mrs., On ----- - Cow. 483 

— Holy Willie, On - - - - - - Burns 44 

— Hood, a ruling elder, On Burns 185 

— Hughes, John, and Sarah Drew, To - Pope 386 

— Humphrey, James, On - Burns 186 

— Infant, On an - - - Col. 43, 199; Cow. 515 

— Jacobite, On a - - - - - - Mac. 198 

— Johnson, Dr., On ----- Cow. 437 

— Kneller, Sir Godfrey, On Pope 346 

— Langdale chapel-yard, In - - - - Wor. 489 

— Lichfield cathedral, Monument in - - Scott 380 

— Malcolm, captain Daniel - Hoi. 322 

— Malkin, B. H., On - - -Mac. 210 

— Marchioness of Winchester, On - - Mil. 416 

— Marquis, On a person nicknamed the - Burns 179 

— Martin, Henry, On ----- Mac. 149 

— Melanippus and his sister - Cow. 514 

— Metcalf , lord, On ----- Mac. 211 

— Miltiades, thy valor best - Cow. 514 

— My name — my country - Cow. 513 

— Newton, Sir Isaac, For - Pope 348 

— Niobe, On ----.- - Cow. 517 

— Noisy polemic, On a - - - - - Burns 186 

— Painter, this likeness Cow. 514 

— Parnell, Dr., On. ----- Gol. 137 

— Paston, Mrs. Margaret, On - - - - Dry. 319 

— Physiognomist, On a - - - - - Sch. 306 

— Poet's epitaph ----- Wor. 415 

— Pointer, On a - - - - - Cow. 493 

— Purdon, Edward, On - Gol. 137 

— Redbreast, On a ----- Cow. 487 

— Reed-pen, On a ----- - Cow. 515 

— Richardson, Gabriel, On - - - - Burns 181 

— Riddel, Mrs., of Woodley Park, On - Burns 182 

— Robin, On a - - Cow. 487; Rog. 341 

— Rogers, master, On - - - - - " - Dry. 316 

— Rowe, Nicholas, For ----- Pcpe 344 

— Schoolmaster, On a - - - - Burns 179 

— Sidney, Sir Philip ----- Spe. 641 

— Stanley, Miss. On Tho. 448 



147 



Epitaphs 
Ere 



Epitapks : Suicide, On a - Burns 183 

— Take to thy bosom - Cow. 514 

— Tarn Samson's weel-worn clay here lies - Burns 96 

— Tarn the Chapman, On - Burns 185 

— These are two friends - She. 448 

— Three innocents lie buried here - - - Wes. 158 

— Threnos — Beauty, truth and rarity - - Sha. 1054 

— Trumbull, Sir William, On Pope 342 

— Two brothers, Over grave of Hem. 375 

— Vernon, Mary, To Wor. 489 

— Virgil and Tibullus, On Byron 133 

— W , On ------ Burns 179 

— Wag in Mauchline. (James Smith.) - Burns 177 

— Wat, On - Burns 187 

— Wee Johnny, On ----- Burns 185 

— Wesley, Charles, On - - - - - Wes. 58 

— Westminster abbey Pope 349 

— Whitmore, lady, On Dry. 317 

— Winchester, marquis of, On - - - - Dry. 320 

— Withers, Gen. Henry, On - - - - Pope 346 

— You that seek what life is - Byron 261 
Epithalamion for Spenser's wedding - - Spe. 645 
Epithalamium, or wedding song - Goe. 113 ; Poe 106 

Sch. 284; Scott 390; She. 442, 576 

— (James T. Fields.) Fav. 54 

Epochs, The— a sonnet ----- Goe. 220 

Eppie Adair — a song Burns 227 

Epping Hunt ------- Hood 481 

Equal to Jove that youth must be - - Byron 132 

— troth — a sonnet ----- - Ros. 242 

Equestrian courtship ------ Hood 401 

Equitable, The ----- P. of F. 164 

— The, ' ' God will roll up " - - - P. of F. 75 
Erato. (Tears of the Muses.) - - - Spe. 586 
Ere down yon blue Carpathian hills - - Whi. 81 

— God hath built the mountains - - - Cow. 55 

— in the northern gale ----- Bry. 68 

— he was born, the stars of fate - - - Erne. 241 

— Nessus yet had reached the other bank Dante 42 

— on my bed my linibs I lay - - - - Col. 164, 209 

— Psyche drank the cup that shed - - Moore 603 

— sin could blight or sorrow fade - - Col. 43 

— the birth of my life, if I wished - - - Col. 220 

— the brothers through the gateway - - Wor. 455 

— the leviathan can swim - Sha. 165 

— thou scattered thy leaf to the wind - - Byron 241 

— with cold beads of midnight dew - - Wor. 104 

— yet my heart was sweet love's tomb - Ten. 469 

— yet our course was graced - - - - Wor. 328 

— yet th£ warning chimes of midnight - Hoi. 272 



Eremite 1 ztft 

Euryclea - L ^ to 

Eremite convent of Camaldoli - - - - Wor. 317 

Erewhile of music and ethereal mirth - - Mil. 412 

— on England's pleasant shores - - - Bry. 34 
Ergimi all' Etra o Clio ----- Mil. 509 
Ergo bibamus ! — a song ----- Q e. 98 
Eribert, viceroy, c. in Vespers of Palermo - Hem. 493 
Erin, O Erin !------ Moore 226 

— the tear and the smile in thine eyes - Moore 214 

Erinna, Epigram to Pope 399 

Erl-king, The— a ballad - - - Goe. 106; Scott 371 

Ermengarde, To ------ Wil. 215 

Erminia, niece of Otho, c. in Otho the Great Keats 333 
Eros ------ Mer. 189 ; Erne. 89, 300 

— friend of Antony, c. in Ant. and Cleopatra Sha. 911 

— what mean'st thou by this? - Goe. 269 
Erpingham, Sir Thomas, c. in Henry v. - Sha. 439 
Errata, Table of - - - - - - Hood 430 

Error, but some sober brow - - - - Sha. 193 

— Words of ------- Sch. 243 

Erskine, Harry, Epigram on - - - - Burns 177 

— John Francis, Letter to - - - - Burns 487 

— Mrs. , Epitaph on Scott 417 

— To — a sonnet Col. 95 

EryriWen - - - - - - - Hem. 249 

Escalus, an ancient lord, c. in Meas. for Meas. Sha. 67 

— prince of Verona, c. in Romeo and Juliet Sha. 712 
Escanes, a lord of Tyre, c. in Pericles - - Sha. 977 
Esopus to Maria — an epistle - - - - Burns 141 
Espices sont a Ceres, Les - - - - - Mer. 238 
Essay on criticism ------ Pope 40 

— on man -------- Pope 185 

Essays : Advantages in sending travelers to Asia Gol. 464 

— Alcander and Septimius, Story of - - Gol. 371 

— Asem ; an eastern tale . . . G- 1. 449 

— Beau Tibbs ; a character - Gol. 423 

— Description of various clubs - Gol. 380 

— Distresses of a disabled soldier - - - Gol. 507 

— Dress, Leveling distinction of - - - Gol. 443 

— Education of youth ----- Grol. 401 

— English clergy and popular preachers - Gol. 458 

— Folly of learning wisdom in retirement - Gol. 520 

— Frailty of man, On the - ' - - Gol. 514 

— Friendship - Gol. 516 

— Generosity and justice - Gol. 397 

— Genius of love Gol. 502 

— Happiness of temper Gol. 375 

— Increased love of life with age - - - Gol. 440 

— Indigent philosopher, Speech of - - Gol. 420 

— Irresolution of youth ----- Gol. 431 

— Ladies 1 passion for leveling distinctions - .Gol. 443 



i a q Eremite 

■ Ltt « 7 Euryclea 

Essays : Letters by a common councilman Gol. 524 

— Love and friendship Gol. 371 

— Mad dogs, On - ... Gol. 435 

— Magazine in miniature, Specimen of - Gol. 418 

— Philosophy of composition - Poe 171 

— poetic principle, The Poe 19 

— Policy of concealing our wants - - - Gol. 390 

— Power of words Poe 190 

— Quack doctors -.■----.-- Gol. 485 

— Eeverie at the Boar's-head tavern - - Gol. 469 

— Eules for good behavior - Gol. 421 

— Eules for raising the devil - Gol. 422 

— Eussian assembly, Eules at a - - - Gol. 500 

— Strolling player, Adventures of a - - Gol. 489 

— Versatility of popular favor - Gol. 414 
Essex, Earl of, c. in King John - - - Sha. 332 

— earl of, Sonnet to ----- - Spe. 26 

Ettu Brute! Then fall Csesar - - - Sha. 775 

Etching moralized ------ Hood 441 

Eternal goodness, The ----- Whi. 318 

— in the future P. of F. 184 

— in the past - - - - - - - P. of F. 184 

— Lord ! eased of a cumbrous load - - - Wor. 318 

— smiles his emptiness betray - - - Pope 273 

— spirit of the chainless mind ! - - Byron 82 

— spirit ! universal God ! Wor. 705 

— The - - - - - - - - P. of F. 134 

— time ! that wasteth without waste - - Byron 246 
Eternity, Anticipations of - Wes. 374 
Ethelbert, an abbot, c. in Otho the Great - Keats 333 
Ethereal minstrel i pilgrim of the sky ! - - Wor. 190 

— race, inhabitants of air - - - - Tho. 444 

Etherage, George, To- - - - - - Dry. 277 

Etienne de la boece ----- Erne. 76 

Ettarre, Pelleas and - m - - - - - Ten. 422 

Ettrick forest's mountain dun - - - Scott 439 

Euganean hills, Written among the - - She. 203 

Eugene de Luvois was a man, who, in part Mer. 61 

Eulalie- -------- Poe 97 

Eumaeus, Conversation with - Odys. 197 

Eumenides, Choruses of the - - - Lon. 346, 351 

Euphorion, c. in Faust ----- Faust 170 

Euphronius, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - Sha. 911 

Euripides, From - - - - - - Eog. 236 

— Paraphrase on ------ B ro . 176 

— Translation from ----- Byron 152 
Europe, On leaving ------ Wil. 82 

— Peace of ------- Whi. 161 

Euryalus, Episode of Byron 148 

Euryclea, Discovery of Ulysses to - - Odys. 264 



Eurydice 1 KA 

Excise lov 

Eurydice Low. 89 

Eustace I said, did blithe mark - - - Scott 73 

Eustis, Caroline. Blue flowers ... Elo. 420 

Euterpe. (Tears of the Muses.) - - - Spe. 584 

Euthanasia Byron 247 ; Mer. 289 

Eva Whi. 166 

— To • - Erne. 87 

Evangeline, a tale of Acadie - Lon. 95 

Evans, Sir Hugh, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor Sha. 42 

Eve, c. in Cain ------ Byron 105 

— is a twofold mystery ----- Bro. 25 

— of death - White 264 

— of election Whi. 236 

— of Saint Agnes Keats 185 

— of Saint John ------- Scott 346 

— of Saint Mark - Keats 242 

Eveleen's bower - Moore 222 

Evelyn Hope. (Robert Browning.) - - Fa v. 376 

Even as a child of sorrow that we give - - Ros. 238 

— as a dragon's eye that feels - - - Wor. 238 

— as the moon grows queenlier - - - Ros. 236 

— as the sun with purple-colored face - - Sha. 1000 

— as a river — partly lit might seem - - Wor. 561 

— as the blessed, at the final summons - Lon. 19 

— in the afternoon of her best days, - - Sha. 577 

— so - - - - Ros. 106 

— so for me a vision — a sonnet - - - Wor. 232 

— song Her. 147; Hoi. 227 

— such a man so faint ----- Sha. 410 

— such the contrast that - Wor. 371 

— Sunday shines no sabbath-day for me - Pope 264 

— the beauteous must die ! - - Sch. 231 

— there where merchants most do congregate Sha. 184 

— this heavenly pair were unequally - - Goe. 271 

— while I speak the sacred roofs of France - Wor. 379 
Evening - - - - Mer. 461; Sch. 107; She. 475 

— (John Milton.) - Fav. 27 

— among the Alps ------ Hem. 334 

— before the flight ------ Mer. 424 

— bells, Those Hood 480 

— by a tailor Hoi. 6 

— chant Pro. 394 

— hymn - Pro. 335 

— in Greece ------- Moore 659 

— in Tuscany - - Mer. 443 

— Ode to. (Collins.) Flo. 372 

— prayer Hem. 357 

— rainbow. (Robert Sou they.) - - - Flo. 435 

— reverie -------- Bry. 194 

— sail, The. (Crabbe.) Fav. 236 



1 Kl Eurydiee 

Awl Excise 

Evening star, Song to Cam. 226 

— star, To the - - - - - - - Cam. 219 

— star, The — a sonnet ----- Lon. 91 

— thought. (Written at sea.) - Hoi. 85 

— voluntaries ------- Wor. 390 

— walk -------- Wor. 15 

— wind - - - - - - . - - Bry. 124 

Event in ancient history - Wor. 276 

Eventide, At - - - - - - - Whi. 416 

Ever and everywhere — a song - Goe. 64 

— honor the whole, individuals only - - Sch. 259 

— indulgent, The - P. of F. 160 

— let the fancy roam ----- Flo. 267 

— living, The- - - - - - -P. of F. 129 

— take it for granted, that man - Sch. 259 

— the poet from the land - Erne. 239 
Everett, Edward— "Our first citizen" - - Hoi. 268 
Evergreens. (Pinckney.) - Flo. 326 
Evermore thanks, the exchequer oi* - - Sha. 367 
Every day brings a ship - Erne. 188 

— day hath its night ------ Ten. 466 

— day my wife tells me ----- Burns 336 

— inordinate cup is unblessed - Sha. 891 

— one can master a grief but him - - Sha. 121 

— one fault seeming monstrous - - - Sha. 218 

— room hath blazed with lights - - - Sha. 748 

— spirit of the woods — a song - - - Moore 182 

— subject's duty is the king's - - - Sha. 456 

— thought is public ------ Erne. 239 

— true man's apparel fits your thief - - Sha. 83 

— why hath a wherefore ----- Sha. 97 

— youth for love's sweet portion sighs - Goe. 200 
Everything advantageous to life - - - Sha. 7 

— handsome about him ----- Sha. 128 

Evil deeds - - P. of F. 57 

Evir-Allen ------- Oss. 28 

Ewie wi' the crooked horn - - - Burns 334 

Ex prselio undse ignisque (si physicis sides) Her. 572 

Exaggeration — a sonnet ----- Bro. 88 

Exalt me, Clio, to the skies - Cow. 551 

Exalted, The - - - - - - P. of F. 84 

Exalter, The - - - - - - -P. of F. 63 

Excellent dumb discourse ----- Sha. 14 

— new song ------- Burns 288 

— to have a giant's strength - Sha. 75 

— wretch ! Perdition catch my soul - - Sha. 893 
Excelsior -------- Lon. 40 

Except I be by Silvia ----- Sha. 32 

Exchange, The — a song ----- Goe. 47 

Excise, On being appointed to the - - Burns 179 



Exciseman i xt) 

Fair 1 * 3 ' J 

Exciseman, Epigram on - Burns 183 

Excursion, The ------ Wor. 595 

Excuse — an antique ------ Groe. 271 

— is needless when with love sincere - - Wor. 230 

— me sirs, I pray— I can't yet speak - - G-ol. 271 
Excussas manibus calamos f alcemque - - Her. 548 
Execution of Montrose ----- Ayt. 29 
Exeter, Duke of, c. in Henry v. - - - Sha. 439 

— Duke of (Thos. Beaufort), c. in Henry vi. . ot. 1 Sha. 469 

— Marchioness of, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 
Exhortation, An - - - - - - - She. 418 

— to courage. (Shakespeare.) - - - - Fav. 61 

— to prayer Cow. 71 

Exile of Erin ------- Cam. 153 

— The, from the Persian - Erne. 245, 315 
Exile's dirge ------- Hem. 225 

— return - - - Bro. 74 

— song. (Eobt. Gilffllan.) - - - Fav. 342 
Exiles, The ------- Whi. 37 

Exodus, On passages in - - - - Wes. 181, 241 

Expect na, sir, in this narration - - Burns 90 

Expectation ----- Pro. 316; Sch. 105 

— and fulfillment ------ Sch. 261 

Experience ------- Erne. 228 

— like a pale musician ----- Bro. 84 

Experiments ------- Ten. 393 

Experiens, though noon auctorite - - - Cha. 175 

Explanation of an antique gem - • - Goe. 228 

Expostulation ------- Cow. 149 

— and reply - - Wor. 412 

— to lord King - Moore 618 

Expression is the dress of thought - - Pope 49 

Extempore on two lawyers - - - Burns 177 

— on William Smellie Burns 178 

— pinned to a lady's coach - - - Burns 183 

— to Mr. Syme Burns 184 

Extinguishers, The Moore 579 

Extracts from medical poem - Hoi. 45 

Extreme unction ------ Low. 76 

Extremes in nature equal good produce - Pope 247 

Ey ! G-oddes mercy ! sayd our hoste - - - Cha. 290 

Eye nature's walks, shoot folly as it flies - Pope 187 

— of newt and toe of frog ----- Sha. 801 

— To the - - - - - - - - Hem. 336 

Eyes --------- She. 571 

— look your last ! Sha. 738 

— not down-dropped nor over-bright - - Ten. 8 

— so tristful, eyes so tristful - - - Lon. 230 

— that make heaven forget, and lips of balm Am. 25 
Ez for war, I call it murder - Low. 170 



-| pcq Exciseman 

lOO Fair 

Ezekiel, On passages in book of Wes. 209 

— chap, xxxiii., verses 30-33 - - - Whi. 83 

F , To Byron 255 ; Poe 105 

F. A. L., To Miss ------ Hem. 263 

F., J. T. 5 To Whi. 245 

F. W. C., 1864- ------ Hoi. 218 

Fabian, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 266 

— servant of Olivia, c. in Twelfth Night - Sha. 281 
Fabius, this region, desolate and drear - - Bry. 257 
Fable and truth have shed in rivalry - - Rog. 138 

— for critics ------- Low. 113 

— mountain and squirrel - Erne. 71 

— of Dry ope. (From Ovid.) - Pope 436 
Fables for the holy alliance - - - - Moore 568 
Face beloved, To a - - - - - - Wil. 275 

— to face in my chamber - Bro. 361 
Facesse Stoica plebs obambulans cautes - - Her. 544 
Fact and imagination - - - - - Wor. 424 
Facts respecting an old arm-chair - - - Hoi. 174 
Fading -------- She. 557 

— autumn. (Mrs. E. C. Kinney.) - - - Flo. 275 
Faery queen, The ------ Spe. 29 

Fail me not thou ! Wil. 273 

Failing impartial measure to dispense - Wor. 249 

Failure- - -. - - Mer. 286; Ing. 503 

Fain had I to-day surprised - - - - Goe. 196 

— would my muse the flowery - Pope 444 
Faint heart never won fair lady - - - Byron 243 

— with love, the lady of the South - - - She. 509 
Faintly as tolls the evening chime - - Moore 198 
Fair Albion smiling, sees her son depart Byron 243 

— Amy in the terraced house - - - Bro. 602 

— as a summer dream was Margaret - - Low. 27 

— as the earliest beam of eastern light - Scott 142 

— at Chicago, Hymn for ----- Hoi. 253 

— bosom, fraught with virtue's richest treasure Spe. 700 

— bride attended by our blessing - - - Sch. 284 

— Brussels, thou art far behind - - - Scott 304 

— charmer, cease, nor make your voice's prize Pope 443 

— cruel! why are ye so fierce and cruel? - Spe. 695 

— daffodils, we weep to see - - Fav. 419 ; Flo. 36 

— daughters were by beauty reared - - Goe. 242 

— Eliza — a song - Burns 239 

— Ellen Irwin, when she sate - - - Wor. 254 

— eyes the mirrors of my mazed heart - - Spe. 688 

— fa' the honest rustic swain. (Janet Little.) Burns 440 

— fa' your honest, sonsie face - - - Burns 103 

— Greece ! sad relic of departed worth - Byron 299 

— hawthorn flowering Flo. 54 



Fair 1 KA 

Familiar x u ^ 

Fair Ines - Hood 135; Poe 39; Fav. 162 

— insect ! that with threadlike legs - - Bry. 89 

— is foul and foul is fair Sha. 788 

— is her cottage in its place - Ten. 387 

— is my love, but not so fair as fickle - - Sha. 1050 

— is my love, when her fair golden - - Spe. 701 

— is thy sight, Lorrento, green thy shore - Bry. 180 
r- Isabel, poor simple Isabel - Keats 165 

— islands of the sunny sea. (E. H. W.) - Whi. 395 

— isle, The Hem. 245 

— isle that from the fairest of all - - - Poe 96 

— Jenny — a song - - - - - - Burns 257 

— kind and true, a treasure - Dry. 317 

— kind and true is all my argument - - Sha. 1041 

— lady ! can I sing of flowers - Wor. 151 

— lady ! whose harmonious name - - Cow. 596 

— land, thee all men greet - - - Wor. 319 

— maid, you need not take the hint - - Burns 177 

— nature's priestesses, to whom - Whi. 162 

— pledges of a fruitful tree - - Fav. 328; Flo. 34 

— prime of life — a sonnet ----- Wor. 234 

— proud, now tell me, why should fair be proud Spe. 691 

— river, in thy bright, clear flow ■ - - Poe 149 

— star of evening, splendor of the West - Wor. 269 

— stranger, The — a song ----- Dry. 535 

— Thamis stream. (H. B.) - - - - Spe. 24 

— the face of orient day - Burns 118 

— tree of winter, fresh and flowering - - Flo. 298 

— tresses man's imperial race insnare - - Pope 68 

— wert thou in the dreams - Hem. 313 

— women, Dream of - - - - - - Ten. 49 

— ye be sure, but cruel and unkind - - Spe. 696 

— young lady, To a - -• Dry. 541 
Fairbone's tomb, On Dry. 318 
Fairest and foremost of the train - - - Cow. 185 

— apparition - Sch. 260 

— isle, all isles excelling ----- Dry. 558 

— lady and noble, for once on a time - - Hood 441 

— maid of Devon banks — a song - - - Burns 289 

— of the destinies She. 578 

— of the fair," Remarks on - Burns 302 

— put on awhile Moore 270 

Fairfax, lord, Sonnet to Mil. 478 

Fairy chasm — a sonnet Wor. 329 

— favors Hem. 432 

— land Poe 160 

— tale Hood 382 

Faith Her. 132 

— and works ------- Wes. 175 

— "Simple Trust." (Mme. Guyon.) - -Cow. 643 



1 ^ H air ., 

LO ° Familiar 

Faith, though rational, is founded - - Wes. 159 

— words of -------- Sch. 242 

Faithful bird, The ----- Cow. 430 

— dog. (Lydia H. Sigourney.) - - - Fav. 60 

— found among the faithless - Mil. 132 

— The - - - - - - - - P. of F. 27 

Faithless boy, The— a ballad - - - - Goe. 105 

— Nelly Gray Hood 361 

— Sally Brown - - - - - - Hood 328 

Falcon of Ser Federigo Lon. 237 

— The - Low. 48 

Fall of Fyers, At the Burns 109 

— of Hebe, The Moore 171 

— of Eobespierre— a drama - Col. 382 

— of the Aar— Handec ------- Wor.. 295 

— of the deer ------- Hood 540 

— of the Indian. (McLellan.) - - - Fav. 130 

— stream from heaven to bless - Erne. 315 

— thickly fall ! thou winter snow - - - Flo. 299 
Fallen and diffused into a shapeless - - Wor. 332 

— as he is, this king of birds - - • - - Cam. 273 

— For the Wes. 91 

— is the golden city,— in the dust - - Hem. 282 

— is thy throne - Moore 34<0 

— on the inventors' heads - Sha. 846 

— was the house of Giaf ar ----- Hem. 394 
Falling leaves and the kitten - - - Wor. 157 
Falls of the Passaic. (Irving.) - - - Flo. 486 
False as dicers' oaths ----- Sha. 832 

— cruel, disappointed, stung to the heart - Cow. 478 

— diamonds set in flint ! Bry. 142 

— friend, To a - - Hood 173 

— friend, wilt thou smile or weep - - She. 298 

— genius, A - Pro. 29 

— glazing pleasures, casks of happiness - Her. 268 

— impulse to study Sch. 259 

— love, and hast thou played me this - - Scott 391 

— poets and true — a sonnet - Hood 182 

— step -------- Bro. 595 

Falsehood and vice— a dialogue - - - She. 60 
Falser than all fancy fathoms - - - Ten. 90 
Falstaff , Sir John, c in Merry Wives of Windsor Sha. 42 
c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - - Sha. 382 

— sweats to death - Sha. 389 

Fame Erne. 311 

— and fortune Byron 259 

— tells of groves — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 242 

— wisdom, love, and power were Byron 193 ; Fav. 206 
Familiar as his garter ----- Sha. 440 

— epistle to a friend - Low. 371 



Familiar 1 Pi A 

Farewell it>0 

Familiar letter- ------ Hoi. 306 

Familiarity dangerous - Cow. 603 

Familist's hymn, The - - - - - Whi. 35 

Family, For a ------ - Wes. 101 

— record, A ------ - Hoi. 315 

— The --------- Her. 233 

— worship, Hymn for ----- White 356 
Famine, The - Lon. 185; Fav. 196 

— Tower of ------- She. 443 

Famulus, c. in Faust ------ Faust 170 

Fan, On a - - - - - - - - Pope 443 

Fanatics have their dreams wherewith - - Keats 281 

Fancy. (Keats.) - Flo. 267; Moore 602 

— a sonnet - - Ing. 437 

— A.- - - Mer. 193 

— and tradition — a sonnet ----- Wor. 389 

— in nubibus - - - - - - - Col. 222 

— Poems of the - Wor. 141 

— Sonnet to ------ - Hood 164 

— who leads the pastimes ----- Wor. 141 

Fancy's casuistry ------ Low. 365 

Faneuil Hall, To ------ Whi. 67 

Fang, a sheriff's officer, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 Sha. 409 

Fanny, dearest ------ Moore 103 

— upon thy breast I may not lie - - - White 362 

— To - - - - - - - - Moore 146 

Fantasia -------- Hoi. 187 

Far as the sight can reach - - - - Moore 668 

— away in the twilight time - - - - Whi. 228 

— away, where darkness reigneth - - - Sen. 104 

— back in the ages ------ Bry. 46 

— explore the mountain hollow - Goe. 64 

— far away ------- She. 437 

— from his close and noisome cell - - - Whi. 102 

— from my dearest friend, 'tis mine to rove Wor. 16 

— from our home by Grasmere's quiet lake - Wor. 445 

— from the madding crowd's ignoble strife Fav. 32 

— from the world, O Lord, I flee - - - Cow. 82 

— happier are the dead, methinks - - Cow. 516 

— hath he gone whose foot treads down - - Arn. 160 

— in the bosom of the deep - Scott 388 

— in the chambers of the west - - - Scott 188 

— through the Delphian shades - - - Hem. 307 

— through the memory shines a happy day - Low. 393 

— up on Katahdin thou towerest - - - Low. 63 

— 'yond this narrow parapet of time - - Low. 23 
Fare thee well ------- Byron 222 

— thee well, perfidious maid - - - Moore 58 

— thee well, thou holly green ! Scott 428 

— thee well, thou lovely one - - - Moore 523 



ikV Familiar 

1 ° ' Farewell 

Farewell, A - Bro. 69; Burns 177; Goe. 46; Mer. 443 

Pro. 121; Rog. 244; Ten. 114; Wor. 102 

— but whenever you welcome the hour - Moore 246 

— dear friend, may guid luck hit you - Burns 177 

— deep valley, with thy one rude house - Wor. 649 

— endued with all that can engage - - - Cow. 446 

— false hearts ; whose best affections fail - Cow. 420 

— farewell, to my mother's own daughter - Hood 503 

— farewell to thee, Araby's daughter - - Moore 458 

— for the bark has her breast to the tide - Hoi. 137 

— if ever fondest prayer - Byron 228 

— life ! my senses swim Hood 172 

— lines - Wor. 133 

— Macready, since to-night we part - - Ten. 485 

— merry maidens, to song and to laugh - Scott 436 

— O dream of mine ! ----- Pro. 121 

— of all of earthly hope - - - - - Wes. 52 

— old Scotia's bleak domains - - - Burns 92 

— Songs of ------- Hoi. 255 

— The - Burns 92, 272; Goe. 38; Scott 216; Whi. 56 

— the beauteous sun is sinking - - - Sch. 330 

— the tranquil mind ------ Sha. 895 

— then my golden repeater - - - - Hood 456 

— Theresa! ------- Moore 533 

— thou art too dear for my possessing - - Sha. 1038 

— thou fair day, thou green earth - - Burns 231 

— thou little nook of mountain-ground - Wor. 102 

— thou once a sinner ------ Wes. 145 

— thou stream — a song ----- Burns 267 

— to a' our Scottish fame — a song - - Burns 249 

— to all my greatness ----- Sha. 611 

— to brethren of St. James' Lodge - - Burns 201 

— to England ------- Byron 236 

— to Henry W. Longfellow, 1868 - - - Hoi. 263 

— to Italy ------- Rog. 168 

— to James Russell Lowell - Hoi. 137 

— to London Pope 361 

— to Louis Agassiz - Hoi. 294 

— to love -------- Cam. 233 

— to Mackenneth, great earl of the North - Scott 394 

— to Mackenzie ------ Scott 394 

— to North maven - - - - - - Scott 433 

— to the dead - - Hem. 148 

— to the flowers. (Mrs. Sigourney.) - - Flo. 272 

— to the glen ------- Ros. 164, 268 

— to the land where the gloom of my glory Byron 261 

— to the muse. (Pirate.) - Scott 440 

— to the reader - - - - - - - Sch. 289 

— too little and too lately known - - - Dry. 295 

— ye dungeons dark and strong - - Burns 208 



Farewell 1 KQ 

Favorite 1JO 

Farewell, ye lofty spires - - - Erne. 222 

— ye mountains and ye pastures - - - Sen. 345 
Farmer of Tilsbury Vale, The - - - Wor. 483 
Farragut, admiral, At dinner to, 1865 - - Hoi. 262 
Farther and farther away, alas ! - - - Goe. 283 
Fashioner, The - - - - - - P. of F. 38 

Fast as the rolling seasons bring - - - Hoi. 218 

— from the West the fading day - - White 345 

— March, 1832— a sonnet - Wor. 438 

— this life of mine was dying - - - - Bro. 144 
Fastolf e, Sir John, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 1 - - Sha. 469 
Fata Morgana ------- Lon. 228 

Fatality *- Mer. 187 

Fate --------- Erne. 171 

— and sympathy. (Her. and Dor. i.) - - Goe. 289 

— gave the word, the arrow sped - - - Burns 114 

— now allows us 'twixt the departing - - Goe. 79 

— of the butterfly — muiopotmos - - - Spe. 566 

— of the Nortons ------ Wor. 334 

— summoned, in gray-bearded age - - Whi. 410 
Fates, Song of the Goe. 404 

— To the - - - - - - - - Sch. 301 

Father, dear father ! God has made a star - Wil. 82 

— how kind thou art ----- Wes. 286 

— how wide thy glories shine - - - - Wes. 294 

— I have sinned against heaven - - - Wes. 316 

— I joyfully believe - - - - - Wes. 239 

— if I have sinned ------ Wes. 214 

— if thou my father art ----- Wes. 319 

— Kronos, To— an ode ----- Goe. 171 

— of all ! in every age - Pope 221 

— of light ! great God of heaven - Byron 170 ; Fav. 146 

— of lights, thy needful aid - Wes. 117 

— of mercies, heavenly friend - - - Hoi. 156 

— reading the Bible ------ Hem. 429 

— show to me thy glory - Wes. 246 

— Son and Spirit, come ----- Wes. 112 

— The Sch. 262 

— though late I turn to thee - - - - Wes. 260 

— thy will be done, not mine - - - Wes. 49 

— to God himself we cannot give - - - Wor. 376 

— to his. (Milton.)- ----- Cow. 579 

— to that first born of thine - Wes. 239 

— to the my soul I lift ----- Wes. 355 

— to thy suffering poor Whi. 35 

Fatherland, The Low. 13 

Fathers - - Ing. 520 

— Anecdote for Wor. 84 

— specter, The - She. 557 

Fathoms deep beneath the wave - - - Scott 434 



159 



Farewell 
Favorite 



Fatima Mer. 269; Ten. 30 

— and Kaduan Bry . 142 

Falconbridge, Lady, c. in King John - - Sha. 332 

— Eobert, c. in King John - Sha. 332 
Faust, Scenes from - - - - - - She. 546 

— Dedication to Goe. 390 

Favor of the moment - Sch. 113 

Favored beasts, The. (Divan.) - - - Goe. 386 
FAVORITE POEMS: 



(Ben 



Abou Ben Adhem and the Angel. 

(Leigh Hunt.) . 
Acrostic — Electricity is the Breath 

of God. (F. A.) . . . 
Addison, Joseph. The Soul . 
Address to the Comet (anon.) 
Advertisement of Lost Day. (Mrs . 

Sigourney.) 
Advice to a Reckless Youth 

Jonson.) 
Aldrich, Thomas Bailey. Ballad 

ofBabieBell 

Lycidas 

Our Colors at Fort Sumter 

Song— The chestnuts shine 

All is Vanity. (Byron.) 

Allen, Elizabeth Akers. Bringing 

our Sheaves with us . 
Among Beautiful Pictures. (Alice 

Cary.) 

Angel of the Rain. (Harriet McE. 

Kimball.) .... 
Angels of the House (anon.) 
Art, Ode on. (Sprague.) . 
Aurora Borealis. (Hannah F. 

Gould.) .... 
Autumn. (Shelley.) 
Babe Christabel— an extract. 

(Gerald Massey.) . 
Baby, The (anon.) 
Bacon, Henry. Flowers, The 
Bailey, Philip James. Country 

and Patriotism 

Measure of Life . 

Sabbath Morning in the Coun 

try 

Thoughts . 

Time and its changes 

Waning Spirit 

Woman's Four Seasons . 

Worldly Treasures 

Baily, Thomas Haynes. We Met 
Ballad of Babie Bell. (T. B. Al- 
drich.) 

Ballantine, James. Castles in the 

Air . . . . • . 
Banquet, The. (L. E. Landon.) . 
Barbauld, Anna L. Lifes Good 

Morning 

Barbour, John. Freedom 
Barker, David. Make your Mark 
Beauties of Nature. (Robert 

Burns.) 

Beautiful, The. (Burrington.) 
Bells, The. (Edgar A. Poe.) 
Benjamin, Park. Press on ! 
Berkeley, George. Old World and 

New ..... 



245 



221 



■327 



Bingen on the Rhine. (Mrs. E. C. 

Norton.) .... 371 
Blossoms, To. (Herrick.) . . 328 
Bonds of Affection. (L. E. Lan- 
don.) 278 

Bourne, W. O. Heart's Fine Gold 312 
Break, break, break. (Tennyson.) 405 
Breeze in the Church. (Miss Hinx- 

ham.) 300 

Bridal Melody, A. (James T. 

Fields.) .... 54 
Bride, The. (Mrs. L. H. Sigourney.) 79 
Bride's Farewell. (Mrs. Hemans.) 284 
Bridge of Sighs. (Thomas Hood. ) 139 
Briggs, Caroline A. When I am 

Old 55 

Bring Flowers. (Mrs. Hemans.) 121 
Bringing our Sheaves with us. 

(Elizabeth Akers Allen.) . 424 
Browne, Emma Alice. When I am 

Dead 131 

Browning, Mrs. E. B. Only a Curl 399 
Browning, Robert. Evelyn Hope 376 
Bruce, Michael. Elegy written in. 

Spring 315 

Bryant, William Cullen. Death 

of the Flowers . . .188 

Forest Hymn .... 38 

How to Live . . . 245 

June 158 

November .... 125 

Return of Youth, The . . 408 

Song of the Stars . . 369 

Building on the Sand. (Eliza 

Cook.) 234 

Burial of Sir John Moore. (Charles 

Wolfe.) .... 35 
Burns, Robert. Beauties of Na- 
ture 195 

Cotter's Saturday Night . 91 

For a' that and a' that . 123 

Man was made to Mourn . 249 

Prayer in Prospect of Death 44 

Burrington. The Beautiful . 168 
Bust of Dante. (Thomas W. Par- 
sons.) 446 

Butler, Samuel. Love . . .330 
Butterfield. Mrs. A. M. To a Por- 
trait 185 

Byron, Lord. All is Vanity . 206 

Carnelian, The . . .270 

Darkness .... 73 

Manfred's Soliloquy . . 20 

Prayer of Nature . .146 

Solitude 122 

Campbell, Thomas. Hope of an 

Hereafter . . . .305 
Pleasures of Hope . . 157 



Favorite 



160 



Carnelian, The. (Byron.) . . 270 
Cary, Alice. Among Beautiful 

Pictures 383 

My Creed .... 279 

Castles in the Air (James Bal- 

lantine.) . . . .347 
Cecilia's Day, Ode on. (Dryden.) 101 
Chambered Nautilus. The. 

(Holmes.) . . . .425 
Charity (anon.) .... 215 
Charnel Ship, The. (Lucretia M. 

Davidson.) . . . .263 
Chaucer, Geoffrey. Good Coun- 

sail ... .324 

Children's Hour. (Longfellow.) 3)0 
Clear the Way. (Charles Ma jkay. ) 350 
Common Lot, The. (James Mont- 
gomery.) .... 81 
Cook, Eliza. Building on the Sand 234 
Cotter's Saturday Night. (Burns.) 91 
Country and Patriotism. (Bailey.) 62 

— Lassie (anon.) . . . 299 
Cowper, William. Knowledge and 

Wisdom .... 124 
Crabbe, George. Evening Sail, 

The 236 

Man's Life . . . .39 

Practical Charity . . 59 

Reflections . . . .179 

Croly. Domestic Love . . 29 

— Effect of Oratory , . .171 
Daffodils, The. (Wordsworth.) 28 

— To. (Robert Herrick.) . . 419 
Darkness. (Byron.) ... 73 
Davidson, Lucretia M. Charnel - 

Ship, The .... 263 
Day, John William. Picket before 

Bull Run .... 229 
Day is Done, The. (Longfellow.) 223 
Days of Yore, The. (Douglas 

Thompson.) .... 285 
Death-bed, The. (Thomas Hood.) 89 

— of the Flowers. (Bryant.) .188 
Dedication of School House. 

(Louisa Simes.) . . .236 
Deserted Village— extract. (Gold- 
smith.) 25 

Disasters. (Longfellow.) . . 261 
Diver, The. (Hemans.) . . 295 
Domestic Love. (Croly.) . . 29 
Doorstep, The. (E. C. Stedraan.) 433 
Douglas, Douglas, Tender and 

True. (Mulock.) . . .402 
Drown, Daniel A. Rose by the 

Wayside 280 

To a Friend .... 170 

Dryden, John. Ode on Cecilia's 

Day 101 

Dying Alchemist, The. (Willis.) 153 
Each and All. (Emerson.) . 384 
Electricity is the Breath of Life- 
acrostic . . . .289 
Elegy in a Country Churchyard. 

(Gray.) .... 3) 

— written in Spring. (Michael 

Bruce.) .... 315 
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Each 

and All . . . .314 

Snow-storm, The . . .43 

Evelyn Hope. (Robert Browning.) 376 
Evening. (John Milton.) . . 27 ' 



Evening Sail, The. (Geo. Crabbe.) 236 
Exhortation to Courage. (Shakes- 
peare.) .... 61 
Exile's Song. (Robert Gilfillan.) . 342 
Fairlnes. (Thomas Hood.) . 162 
Faithful Dog, The. (Mrs. Sigour- 

(ney 60 

Fall of the Indian— an extract. 

(McLellan.) . . .130 

Famine, The. (Longfellow.) . 196 
Fields, James T. Bridal Melody. 54 

Tempest, The . . . .149 

Filmore, L. To a Poet who died 

of want . . . . .137 
Flowers. (Thomas P. Moses.) . 254 

— The. (Henry Bacon.) . . 221 
For a' that and a' that. (Burns.) 123 
Forest Hymn. (Bryant.) . . 38 
Found Dead. (Albert Laighton.) 65 
Fountain, The. (Lowell.) . . 420 
Freedom. (John Barbour.) . 325 
Friend, To a. (Daniel A. Drown.) 170 
Gifts of God. (George Herbert.) 406 
Gilfillan, Robert. Exile's Song . 342 
Gilman, Mrs. Mountain Church 257 
Giving in Marriage. (Jean Inge- 
low.) 378 

Goblet, The. (Bayard Taylor.) . 218 
God bless our Fatherland. 

(Holmes.) . . . .271 
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang. Haste 

not! Rest not! . . .423 

Mignon aspiring to Heaven 204 

Goldsmith, Oliver. Deserted Vil- 
lage, The .... 25 

Village Preacher . . . 159 

Good and Better (anon.) . 233 

— Counsail. (Chaucer.) . . 324 
Gould, Hannah F. Aurora Borealis 191 
Graham, James. The Seasons . 118 
Grandmother, The. (Victor 

Hugo.) 354 

Grave of Mrs. Judson. (Miss M. 

Remick.) . . . .263 

Graves of a Household. (Mrs. 

Hemans.) . . . .164 

Gray, Thomas. Elegy in a 

Churchyard .... 30 

Hamlet's Soliloquy. (Shakes- 
peare.) 98 

Happiness. (Keble.) ... 99 

— (Robert Pollock.) . . .269 
Harte, Francis Bret. John Burns 

of Gettysburg . . .432 
Haste not! Rest not! (Goethe.) 423 
He lives long who lives well. (Ran- 
dolph.) 161 

Healing of Daughter of Jairus. 

(Willis.) 113 

Health. (E. C. Pinckney.) . 184 
Heart's Fine Gold. (W. O. Bourne.) 312 
Hedderwich. Joy and Sorrow 21 
Hemans, Mrs. Felicia D. Bride's 

Farewell .... 284 

Bring Flowers . . .121 

Diver, The .... 295 

Grave of a Household . . 164 

Revelers, The ... 57 

Silent Multitude . . .225 

Trumpet, The . . .100 

Wreck, The .... 246 



161 



Favorite 



Herbert, George. Gifts of God 406 

Peace 332 

Vertue 329 

Herrick, Robert. Blossoms, To . 328 

Daffodils, To 419 

Hiawatha's Wooing. (Longfellow.) 45 
Hinxham, Miss. Breeze in the 

Church 300 

Holmes, Oliver W. Chambered 

Nautilus 425 

God Bless our Fatherland 271 

Illustration of a Picture . 293 

Lending a Punch-bowl . 104 

Poesy 322 

Spanish Girl in Reverie . 293 

Home. (James Montgomery.) 337 
— to rest in. (Morford.) . . 265 
Hood, Thomas. Bridge of Sighs 139 

Death-bed, The ... 89 

Fair Lies .... 162 

I remember, I remember . 303 

Time, Hope and Memory . 319 

Hope of an Hereafter. (Camp- 
bell.) 205 

How to Live. (W. C. Bryant.) . 245 
Hugo, Victor. Grandmother, The 354 
Hundred Years Ago (anon.) . 108 
Hunt, Helen Fiske. Spinning . 441 
Hunt, Leigh. Abou Ben Adhem 394 
I remember, I remember. (Hood . ) 303 
I wandered by the brookside. 

(Milnes.) .... 431 
Illustration of a picture. 

(Holmes.) .... 293 
In reverie. (Harriet McEwen 

Kimball.) .... 148 
Inchcape Rock. (Southey.) . 395 
Incompleteness. (Adelaide Proc- 
ter.) . ... 407 
Ingelow, Jean. Giving in Mar- 
riage 378 

Love 375 

Italian Sonnet, From an. (Rog- 
ers.) 281 

Jeannie Morrison. (W. Mother- 
well.) 339 

Joe. (Albert Laighton.) . . 151 
John Burns of Gettysburg. (Bret 

Harte.) . '. . . .432 
Jonson, Ben. Advice to a Youth 323 

Life and Death . . .298 

Noble Nature, The . . 422 

Pleasure of Heaven . . 327 

Joy and Sorrow. (Hedderwich.) 21 
June. (William C. Bryant.) . 158 
Keble, John. Rainbow, The . 398 

Happiness . . . .99 

Kennedy, Crammond. Long Life 68 
Kimball, Harriet McEwen. An- 
gel of the Rain ... 186 

In Reverie . . . .148 

Kingsley, Charles . . .411 
Know Thyself. (Mrs. Sigourney.) 210 
Knowledge and Wisdom. (Co'w- 

per.) 124 

Labor and Rest. (Mulock.) . 410 
Lady of the Earl (anon.) . . 202 
Laighton, Albert. Found Dead 65 

Joe 151 

Landon, Letitia E. Banquet, The 318 

Bonds of Affection . . 278 

11 



Landor, Walter Savage. Maid's 

Lament 33G 

Larcom, Lucy. Strip of Blue . 4^8 
Larvag. (Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.) 440 
Lays of Ancient Rome— extract. 

(Macaulay.) . . . .345 
Lending a Punch-bowl. (O. W. 

Holmes.) . . . .104 
Life (anon.) .... 165 

— and Death 298 

— Clock, The (anon.) . . 208 

— Measure of. (Bailey.) . . 253 
Life's Good Morning. (Barbauld.) 422 

— Morning, Noon and Evening . 260 
Little Rose. (Blackwood's Mag- 
azine.) 320 

Long Life. (Crammond Ken- 
nedy.) . . . . . 68 
Longfellow, Henry W. Chil- 
dren's Hour . . . .380 

Day is Done, The . . 223 

Disasters 261 

Famine, The . . .196 

Hiawatba's Wooing . . 45 

Old Clock on the Stairs . Ill 

Rain in Summer . . .392 

— — Skeleton in Armor . . 357 

Wreck of the Hesperus . 412 

Lost (anon.) .... 228 

— Mexican City. (McLellan.) . 109 
Love. (Samuel Butler.) . . 330 

— (from Songs of Seven— Inge- 

low.) 375 

— and Reason 282 

Loved you better than you knew 306 
Love's Philosophy. (Shelley.) . 256 
Lowell, James Russell. Fountain, 

The 420 

Present Crisis, The . . 363 

Lycidas. (T. B. Aldrich.) . . 40 
Macaulay, T. B. Lays of Ancient 

Rome 345 

Mackay, Charles. Clear the Way 350 
McLellan. Fall of the Indian . 130 

— Lost Mexican City . . .109 
Maid's Lament. (W. S. Landor.) 336 
Make Your Mark. (David Bar- 
ker.) 259 

Man was made to mourn. 

(Burns.) .... 249 
Manfred's Soliloquy. (Byron.) . 20 
Man's Life. (George Crabbe.) . 39 
March of Rebel Angels. (Milton.) 193 
Mariner's Hymn. (Mrs. Southey.) 331 
Massey, Gerald. Babe Christa- 

bel 352 

Maud Muller. (Whittier.) . . 240 
May Queen, The. (Tennyson.) 273 
Men of Old. (R. M. Milnes.) . 349 
Merchant of Venice— an extract 290 
Mignon, Auguste. One Heart's 

enough for me ... 134 

— aspiring to Heaven. (Goethe.) 204 
Milnes, Richard M. I've wander- 
ed by 431 

Men of Old .... 349 

Youth that Pursuest . . 382 

Milton, John. Evening . . 27 

March of Rebel Angels . . 193 

Raphael's Account of Crea- 
tion 71 



Favorite 



162 



Ministry of Angels. (Spenser.) 326 
Montgomery, James. Common 

Lot, The .... 81 

Home 337 

Moore, Thomas. Sweet Remem- 
brances 214 

More, Hannah. Love and Reason 282 

Pleasures of Memory . . 178 

■ Province of Woman . . 238 

Morford. Home to rest in . . 2G5 
Morning among the Hills. (Per- 

cival.) 87 

Moses, Thomas P. Flowers . 254 
Motherwell, William. Jeannie 

Morrison .... 339 
Mountain Church. (Mrs. Gilman.) 257 
Mulock, Dinah Maria. Douglas, 

Douglas 402 

— — Labor and Rest . . . 410 
Music of Nature. (John Pierpont.) 22 
My Creed. (Alice Gary.) . . 279 

— Darling's Shoes (anon.) . . 90 
Nature. (Edward Young.) . 65 
New England (anon.) . . .191 
New Year, The. (Willis.) . . 37 
Night. (Southey.) .... 42 
Noble Nature, The. (Ben Jonson.) 422 
Norton, Mrs. E. C. Bingen on 

the Rhine .... 371 

Wealth is not happiness . 262 

November. (Wm. C. Bryant.) . 125 
O, not by Graves. (W. R. Wal- 
lace.) 212 

Ocean, Address to the. (B. W. 

Procter.) .... 338 
Old and New Year (anon.) . . 305 

— Clock on the Stairs. (Long- 

fellow.) Ill 

— Folks' Room (anon.) . . 313 

— Home, The. (Tennyson.) . 63 

— Man by the Brook. (Words- 

worth.) 78 

— Man's Comf orts,The. (Southey.) 417 

— World and New, The. (Berke- 

ley.) 427 

On the Sea. (Bayard Taylor.) . 144 
One Heart's enough for me. (Mig- 

non.) 134 

Only a Curl. (Mrs. Browning.) 399 

— a Year. (Mrs. H. B. Stowe.) . 66 

— one Life (anon.) . . . 272 
Opening of the Piano. (Atlantic 

Monthly.) .... 166 
Oratory, Effect of. (Croly.) . 171 
Our Colors at Fort Sumter. (T. 

B. Aldrich.) . . . .132 
Over the River. (Nancy A. W. 

Priest.) 128 

Parsons, Thomas W. Bust of 

Dante 446 

Path of Independence (anon.) 286 
Peace. (George Herbert.) . . 332 
Percival, James G. Morning 

among the Hills ... 87 

Remembrance . . . 235 

Piatt. Sarah M. B. Questions of 

the Hour .... 436 
Picket before Bull Run. (John 

Wm. Day.) .... 229 
Picture, A. (Shillaber.) . . 287 
Pierpont, John. Music of Nature 22 



Pierpont, John. Two Hundred 

Years 133 

Pinckney, E. C. Health . . 184 
Pity of Park Fountain. (Willis.) 192 
Pleasures of Heaven. (B. Jonson.) 327 

— of Hope, Extract from. (Camp- 

bell.) 157 

— of Memory. (More.) . . 178 
Poe, Edgar A. Bell, The . . 388 

Poetic Principle, The . 15 

Raven, The . . . .172 

Poesy. (Oliver Wendell Holmes.) 322 
Poet dreamt of in Heaven 

(anon.) .... 143 
Poet, The— an extract. (Scott.) . 291 

— who died in Want, To a. (L. 

Filmore.) 137 

Pollok, Robert. Happiness . 269 
Portrait. To a. (Mrs. Butterfield.) 185 
Practical Charity. (George 

Crabbe.) 59 

Prayer in Prospect of Death. 

(Burns.) ..... 44 

— of Nature. (Byron.) . . 146 
Present Crisis, The. (Lowell.) . 363 

— The. (Adelaide Procter.) . 386 
Press On! (Park Benjamin.) . 69 
Priest, Nancy A. W. Over the 

River 128 

Primrose of the Rock. (Words- 
worth.) 126 

Princess, The— an extract. (Ten- 
nyson.) 150 

Procter, Adelaide Anne. Incom- 
pleteness .... 407 

Present. The ... 386 

Strive, Wait and Pray . . 404 

Procter, Bryan WaUer. Address 

to the Ocean . . . 338 

Proposal. (Bayard Taylor.) . 70 
Province of Woman. (Hannah 

More) 238 

Questions of the Hour. (Sarah 

M. B. Piatt.) . . .436 
Rain in Summer. (Longfellow.) 332 
Rainbow, The. (John Keble.) . 398 
Randolph. He lives long who 

lives well .... 161 
Raphael's Account of Creation. 

(Milton. 1 .... 71 
Raven, The. (Edgar A. Poe.) . 173 
Read, Thomas Buchanan. Sum- 
mer Shower, The . . . 416 
Reflections. (George Crabbe.) 179 
Reliance on God .... 216 
Remembrance. (James G. Per- 
cival.) . . . . =235 

— (Robert Southey.) ... 23 
Remick, Miss M. Grave of Mrs. 

Judson .... 268 
Retreat from Moscow (anon.) . 248 
Return of Youth, The. (Bryant.) 408 
Revelers, The. (Mrs. Hemans.) 57 
Ring out. Wild Bells. (Tennyson.) 403 
River Path, The. (Whittier.) . 316 
Rogers, Samuel. Italian Sonnet, 

From an 281 

Sensibility .... 304 

On a Tear . . . .207 

Rose by the Wayside. (D. A. 

Drown.) 280 



163 



Favorite 



Rule Britannia. (Thomson.) . 331 
Sabbath Morning in the Country. 

(Bailey.) .... 258 
Sagamore, The. (P. B. Shillaber. 194 
Sands o' Dee, The. (Charles 

Kingsley.) . . . .411 
Scott, Walter. Poet. The— an ex- 
tract 291 

Toast, The .... 309 

Youth 36 

Seasons, The. (James Grahame.) 118 

— — extract. (James Thomson.) 119 
Sensibility. (Samuel Rogers.) . 304 
Serenade, The. (P. B. Shelley.) 183 
Shakespeare. Exhortation to 

Courage .... 61 

Hamlet's Soliloquy . . 98 

Merchant of Venice . . 290 

Spoils of Time . . . .17 

Shelley, Percy Bysshe. Autumn 418 

Love's Philosophy . . 256 

Serenade, The ... 183 

World's Wanderers . . 84 

Shillaber, P. B. Picture, A . 287 

Sagamore, The . . . 194 

Ship, The. (Robert Southey.) . 77 
Sigoumey, Lydia Huntley. Ad- 
vertisement of a Lost Day 245 

— — Bride, The . . . .79 

Faithful Dog, The . . 60 

Know Thyself . . .210 

Silent Multitude. (Mrs. Hemans. ) 225 
Simes, Miss Louisa. Dedication 

of School .... 236 
Skater's Song (anon.) . . 103 

Skeleton in Armor. (Longfellow.) 357 
Snow-storm, The. (Emerson.) . 43 
Solitude. (Byron.) . . .122 
Something Cheap. (Charles 

Swain.) .... 213 
Song— The Chestnuts. (Aldrich.) 107 

— of Seventy. (Tupper.) . . 231 
Soul, The. (Addison.) . . .145 
Southey, Caroline. Mariner's 

Hymn 331 

Southey, Robert. Inchcape Rock 395 

Night 42 

Old Man's Comforts . . 417 

Remembrance . . .23 

Ship, The .... 77 

Spanish Girl in Reverie. (Holmes.) 293 
Speak Gently (anon.) . . 85 
Spenser, Edmund. Ministry of 

Angels . . . .326 
Spinning. (Helen Fiske Hunt.) . 441 
Spoils of Time. (Shakespeare.) 17 
Sprague. Ode on Art . . . 302 
Stars, Song of the. (Bryant.) . 369 
Stedman, Edmund Clarence. 

Doorstep, The . . . 438 
Stewart. True Aristocrat . . 76 
Stowe, Mrs. Harriet B. Only a 

Year 66 

Strip of Blue, A. (Lucy Larcom.) 428 
Strive, Wait and Pray. (Adelaide 

A. Procter.) . . .404 
Summer Shower, The. (T. Bu- 
chanan Read.) . . .416 
Swain, Charles. Something Cheap 213 
Sweet Remembrances. (Thomas 

Moore.) . . . . .214 



Talfourd. 'Tis a little thing . 41 
Taylor, Bayard. Goblet, The . 218 

On the Sea .... 144 

Proposal 70 

Tear, On a. (Samuel Rogers.) . 207 
Tempest, The. (James T. Fields.) 149 
Ten Years Ago. (Alaric Alex. 

Watts.) .... 343 
Tennyson, Alfred. Break, Break, 

Break 405 

May Queen, The . . .273 

Old Home, The ... 63 

Princess, The— an extract . 150 

Ring out, Wild Bells . • 403 

Thompson, Douglas. Days of 

Yore 285 

Thomson, James. Rule Britannia 334 

Seasons, The— extract . .119 

Thoughts. (Bailey.) ... 224 
Through the Darkness. (Wm. 

Winter.) .... 297 
Time and its Changes. (Bailey.) 308 

— Hope and Memory. (Hood.') 319 
— from "Night Thoughts." 

(Yomig.) . . . .311 
'Tis a Little Thing. (Talfourd.) . 41 
Toast, The; (Scott.) . . .309 
True Aristocrat. (Stewart.). . 76 
Trumpet, The. (Mrs. Hemans.) 100 
Tupper, Martin F. Song of Sev- 
enty 231 

Wedding Gifts . . .120 

Twenty Years Ago. (Home Jour- 
nal.) 83 

Two Hundred Years. (Pierpont.) 133 
Unseen Spirits. (Willis.) . . 252 
Vertue. (George Herbert.) . 329 
Village Preacher. (Goldsmith.) . 159 
Vision. A. (A. M. E.) . . 226 
Wallace, W. R. O, not by Graves 212 
Waning Spirit. (P. J. Bailey.) 86 
Watts, Alaric Alex. Ten Years 

Ago 343 

We Met. (Thos. Haynes Baily ) 344 
Wealth is not Happiness . . 262 
Wedding Gifts. (Tupper.) . 120 
When I am Dead. (Emma Alice 

Browne.) .... 131 

— I am Old. (Caroline A. Briggs.) 55 
Whitney, Mrs. A. D. T. Larvae 440 
Whittie'r, John Greenleaf . Maud 

Muller 240 

River Path, The . . .316 

Willis, Nathaniel P. Dying Alche- 
mist 153 

Healing of Jairus' Daughter 113 

New Year, The . . . 37 

Pity of Park Fountain . .192 

Unseen Spirits . . . 252 

Winter, William. Through the 

Darkness .... 297 
Wolfe, Charles. Burial of Sir 

John Moore ... 35 
Woman's Four Seasons. (Bailey.) 239 

— Love (anon.) .... 138 
Wordsworth, Wm. Daffodils, The 28 

Old Man by the Brook . 78 

Primrose of the Rock . . 126 

Worldly Treasures. (Bailey.) . 187 
World's Wanderers. (P. B. Shel- 
ley.) 84 



Fear 
Fire 



164 



Wreck of the Hesperus. (Long- 
fellow.) 412 

Wreck, The. (Mrs. Kemans.) . 246 
Young, Edward. Nature . . 65 



Young, Edward. Time— "Night 

Thoughts". 
Youth. (Walter Scott.) 
— that pursuest. (R. M. Milnes.) 



311 



Fear hath a hundred eyes 

— love, hope and desire - 

— was within the tossing bark 

— with his iron staff may urge 
Fearest thou to go with me? - 



Wor. 

She. 
Hem. 

Sch. 
Scott 



Fearfully and mournfully ----- Hem. 
Feast at Brougham castle - Wor. 

— of languages and stolen the scraps - - Sha. 

— of reason and the flow of soul - - - Pope 

— of victory - Sch. 

Feathers and moss ------ Ing. 

February. (Shepherd's Calendar.) - - - Spe. 

— the fourteenth — a sonnet - - - - Hood 
Fedalma, c. in Spanish Gypsy - - - - Eliot 
Feeble, a recruit, c.in Henry iv., pt. 2 - Sha. 
Feel for the wrongs to universal ken - - Wor. 
Feeling hearts — touch them but rightly - Rog. 
Feelings of a French royalist — a sonnet - - Wor. 

— of a republican on fall of Bonapa,rte - She. 
Fell sorrow's tooth doth never rankle more - Sha. 
Fellow that hath had losses - Sha. 
Fellowship song ------- Goe. 

Felton, Nicholas, Death of. (Milton.) - - Cow. 
Feluca, The. (Italy.) ----- B g. 

Female inconstancy, On - Cow. 

— judgment ----.._ s c h. 

— martyr, The -.-._. Whi. 
Females there are of unsuspicious mind - - Cra. 
Fenton, a gentleman, c. in Merry Wives of W. Sha. 

— Elijah, Epitaph on - - - - - - Pope 

Ferdinand, son of king, c. in Tempest - - Sha. 

— king of Navarre, c. in Love's Labor's Lost Sha. 
Fergusson, Robert, Epigram under portrait of Burns 

Letter on his headstone - - - Burns 

On - - - - - - - - Burns 

Feria, Count de, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 
Fermor, Frances, Cenotaph in memory of - Wor. 

Ferrier, Miss, To Burns 

Festal hour, The Hem. 

Feste, a clown, c. in Twelfth Night - - - Sha. 
Festina lente. (Biglow Papers.) - - - Low. 
Festivals have I seen — a sonnet - - - Wor. 
Fete at Carlton house ----- ghe. 

— Champetre— a song - Burns 
Few words are best, I wish you well - - Pope 

— years have passed since thou and I - Byron 



371 

469 
375 
262 
426 
370 
186 
150 
281 
124 
512 
524 
183 
192 
409 
441 
194 
286 
397 
361 
128 

85 
574 
162 
518 
260 

90 
170 

42 
347 
1 
135 
177 
370 
139 
537 
489 
107 
319 
281 
258 
270 
566 
211 
390 
228 



165 



Fear 
Fire 






Fiammetta — a sonnet ----- Ros. 302 

Fictions in form, but in their substance - - Wor. 668 

Fidelis -------- Pro. 129 

Fidelity -------- Wor. 421 

— till death - Hem. 166 

Fie, my lord, fie ! a soldier - Sha. 806 

— on sinful fantasy - Sha. 65 
Field flowers - Cam. 221; Flo. 187, 529 

— of Waterloo- ------ Scott 304 

— of Waterloo, After visiting - Wor. 293 
Fields, James T. Bridal melody - - - Fav. 54 

The Tempest ------ Fav. 149 

Fierce, fiery warriors fought upon the clouds Sha. 772 

— passions discompose the mind - - - Cow. 64 

— wars and faithful loves - Spe. 29 
Fife and a 1 the lands," Remarks on - - Burns 317 
Fifth Avenue theater, Opening of - - Hoi. 277 
Fiftieth birthday of Agassiz - Lon. 224 
Fight with the dragon - - - -. - Sch. 106 

Filial piety— a sonnet Wor. 246 

Fill all thy bones with ashes - - - - Sha. 5 

— high the blue hirlas, that shines - - - Hem. 241 

— high the cup with liquid flame - - - Moore 135 

— me, boys, as deep a draught - - - Moore 55 

— me with the rosy wine - Burns 188 

— the bright goblet - - - - - Scott 264 

— the bumper fair - - - - - Moore 253 

— the goblet again — a song - - - Byron 232 
Filled is life's goblet to the brim - - - Lon. 39 
Filmore, L. To a poet who died of want - Fav. 137 
Finales to Tales of Wayside Inn - Lon. 271, 291, 316 
Find out the cause of this ----- Sha. 821 

Finding of the lyre ------ Low. 338 

Findlater, Alexander, Letter to - - Burns 504 

Finds tongues in trees, books in the running Sha. 210 

Fine and feathery artisan - Moore 325 

— by defect and delicately weak - - - Pope 232 

— weather in May. (Leigh Hunt.) - - - Flo. 450 
Fingal, c. in Comala - - - - - Oss. 203 

— an epic poem Oss. 293 

Fmgal's cave, After visiting - Keats 269 

Finite and infinite — a sonnet - - - Bro. 90 

Finland, Conquest of - - - Whi. 213 

Finnish song ------- Q- e. 75 

Fintry, my stay in worldly strife - - - Burns 172 

Fionnuala, Song of Moore 224 

Fiordispina - - - - - - - She. 468 

Fire — a sonnet Lon. 392 

— famine and slaughter ----- Col. 145 

— fly, The. (Italy.) Rog. 120 



Fire i ai\ 

Flow IVO 

Fire-fly, The. (B. W. Procter.) - - - Flo. 473 

— fly, To the - - - - - - - Moore 152 

— in each eye and papers in each hand - - Pope 264 

— king, The Scott 361 

— of driftwood - Lon. 129 

— that closest kept Sha. 22 

— worshipers, The ----- Moore 426 
Fired that the house rejects him - - - Pope 266 
Fires the proud tops of the eastern - - - Sha. 369 
Fireside and the sea-side - Lon. 121 

— happiness to hours of ease - Eog. 194 

— The ------ -P. of'F. 114 

Firmament, The ------- Bry. 86 

First angel's story - - - - - Moore 542 

— bringer of unwelcome news - Sha. 410 

— day thoughts ------ Whi. 172 

— drink a health, this solemn night - - Ten. 487 

— fan, The ------- Hoi. 312 

— flowers, The - - - - - - - Whi. 215 

— in these fields I try the sylvan strains - Pope 27 

— kiss of love, The ----- Byron 137 

— loss— a song - - Goe. 44 

— love remembered ------ Eos. 145 

— news from Villa Franca - Bro. 608 

— of all the rose, because its breath - - Flo. 96 

— of December. (Southey.) - - - - . Flo. 294 

— of January. (Southey.) - Flo. 318 

— psalm, The Burns 38 

— quarrel The ------- Ten. 687 

— snow-fall, The Low. 336 

— sorrow, A ------- p ro . 104 

— The ------- p. of F. 142 

— time he kissed me ------ Bro. 163 

— verses — translations from iEneid - - Hoi. 320 

— Walpurgis-night — a cantata - - - - Goe. 157 

— watch. The ------ - Ing. 259 

— when Maggie was my care - - - Burns 228 
Fish, High price of - - - - - - Cow. 398 

— women — on landing at Calais - - - Wor. 292 
Fisherman's daughter, The - - - - Mer. 273 

Fisherman, The - - Goe. 108 

Fishermen, The ------ Whi. 115 

Fishers of men - Pro. 391 

Fit for an abbot of Theleme - - - - Low. 366 

— of illness, In a - - - - - - - Cow. 36 

— retribution by the moral code - - - Wor. 443 
Fitting perfumes to prepare - Goe. 372 
Fitztraver- ------- Scott 38 

Fitzwater, Lord, c. in Richard ii. - - - Sha. 356 

Five carlines. The— a song - Burns 220 



167 fi~ 

Five English poets, Sonnets on - Eos. 294 

— months ago the stream did flow - - Bro. 296 

— things. (Divan.) ------ Goe. 367 

— years have past, five summers - - - Wor. 187 
Fixed like a planet on his peculiar spot - - Pope 196 
Flag of the heroes who left us their glory - Hoi. 158 
Flaminius, a servant, c. in Timon of Athens Sha. 741 
Flanders, Earl of, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 
Flash and outbreak of a fiery mind - - - Sha. 819 

— out a stream of blood-red wine - - - Hoi. 212 
Flat burglary as ever was committed - - Sha. 128 
Flattered with promises of escape - - Wor. 430 
Flatterers, Epigram on Cow. 516 
Flattering mirror, Epigram to a - - - Cow. 521 
Flatting mill, The ------ Cow. 406 

Flavius, a steward, c. in Timon of Athens - Sha. 741 

— a tribune, c. in Julius Caesar - - - Sha. 764 
Fleance, son of Banquo, c. in Macbeth - - Sha. 788 
Fleetly hath passed the year - - Wil. 302 ; Fav. 37 
Flemish lady, To ----- - Wor. 454 

Flesh, how art thou nshified - Sha. 722 

Fleureant, Sir, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - Tay. 232 

Flies an eagle flight bold Sha. 741 

Fling the lattice open ----- Mer. 209 

Floating island ------- Wor. 453 

Flodden Field, Tale of. (Marmion.) - - Scott 42 

Flood of years, The - Bry. 344 

Flooded by rain and snow - Lon. 348 

Flora, dtr. of Oswald, c. in Doom of Devorgoil Scott 524 

— - Arcadian hymn to Flo. 398 

— Maclvor's song. (Waverley.) - - - Scott 392 
Floral poesy. (Mrs. Kirkland.) See Flowers. 
Florence, At — a sonnet ----- Wor. 318 

— Campagna of ----- - Eog. 82 

— Duke of, c. in AlTs Well that Ends Well - Sha. 254 

— exult, for thou so mightily - - - Dante 89 

— Gray -------- Wil. 256 

— Italy -------- Rog. 77 

— Old bridge at ------ Lon. 368 

— To - - - Byron 233 

Florizel, c. in Winter's Tale - Sha. 304 

Floro, c. in Magico Prodigioso - - - She. 540 

Flourish greener, as ye clamber - - - Goe. 54 

— of trumpet ------- Moore 537 

Flourishing vine, whose kindling clusters - She. 503 

Flow down, cold rivulet, to the sea - - Ten. 114 

— freshly flow - - - - - - - Mer. 468 

— gently, sweet Afton, among thy green braes Burns 199 

— on, sweet river ------ Lon. 409 

— - on, thou shining river - Moore 522 



Flow 
Flowers 



168 



Flow on, ye lays so loved, so fair - 
Flower and the leaf, The 

— angels, Song of the. (Mrs. Hale.) 

— de-luce ------ 

— dialogues - - - 
from his mistress, On receiving 



Goe, 
Dry. 

Flo. 
Lon. 

Flo. 
Tho. 



— from the field of Grutti ----- Hem. 

— game -------- Flo. 

— garden Wor. 

— in a letter - Bro. 

— in the crannied wall ----- Ten. 

— language, Modification of - - - - Flo. 

— of liberty, The ------ Hoi. 

— of the mountain, by the wanderers - - Flo. 

— of the waste, the heath-fowl - - - - Flo. 

— salute -------- Goe. 

— The - - Her. 266; Hood 364; Ten. 386; Flo. 

— To a (anon.) ------ Flo. 

— To a. (H.W.Parker.) - - - - Flo. 
Flowers (anon.) - Flo. 

— Hood 176 ; Lon. 4 ; Wor. 328 ; Flo. 

— (Thomas P. Moses.) ----- Fav. 

— (Bryan W. Procter.) Flo. 



Bry. 92: 



Flo. 
Flo. 
Flo. 
Flo. 
Fav. 
Flo. 
Fav. 
Flo. 



— (Mrs. E. Oakes Smith.) 

— Autumn. (Caroline Southey.) 

— Birthday (anon. ) 

— Blue. (Caroline Eustis.) 

— Bring. (Mrs. Hemans.) 

— Captive and the. (Goethe.) 

— Death of the 

— Death of the. (C. Bowles.) - 

— Dial of ------- Hem. 

— Emblems of . (Burns.) ----- Flo. 

— Farewell to the. (Mrs. Sigourney.) - Flo. 

— Field. (Campbell.) - Flo. 187, 

— for the heart. (E. Elliott.) - - - Flo. 

— Hymn to the. (Horace Smith. ) - - - Flo. 

— in Siberia? Behind this lies - - - Seh. 

— in winter -------- Whi. 

Flo. 

Burns 

Flo. 

- Wor. 



— Language of 

— of Edinburgh," Remarks on 

— of the wild wood - 
" — on the top of pillars 
FLOWERS, POETRY OF: 



Addison. Joseph. Death of Nar- 
cissus 48 

Amaranth, The. (Shelley.) . . 182 

— Poesy of the . . . . 181 
Anacreon translated— an ode . 104 
Anemone. (H. Coleridge.) . 439 

— Red. (Tennyson.) . . .130 

— To the. (Miss Pratt.) . 129 



Apple-blossom, Poesy of the . 

— blossoms. (Landon.) 
April. (H. W. Longfellow.) 
Arcadian Hvmn to Flora . ' . 
Arey, H. E.G. Myself . 
Aspen, Poesy of the . 

— tree, The. (Charles Swain. ) 
Asphodel. Poesy of the 



46 
403 
367 
317 
213 
392 
324 
222 
142 
265 
444 
221 
156 
297 
173 

52 
531 
452 
330 
417 
404 
254 
425 
468 
474 
508 
420 
121 
516 
188 
271 
349 
515 
272 
529 
522 
439 
295 
196 
225 
297 
129 
406 



533 

398 
361 
183 
184 
131 



169 



Flow 
Flowers 



August, Song for. (Harriet Mar- 

tineau.) . . . .472 
Autumn, Fading . , . .275 

— Flowers. (Caroline Southey.) 474 

— Leaf, Child and the . . . 507 

— Still day in. (Mrs. Whitman.) 479 
Barton, Bernard. To a Crocus . 30 

The Ivy .... 180 

To the Passion-flower . . 200 

Bay, The. (Eliza Cook.) . . 153 

— Poesy of the . . . . 150 
Beaumont and Fletcher. The Rose 516 
Birdie's Song, The (anon.) . . 465 
Birthday Flowers (anon.) . . 508 
Blessington, Lady. Honeysuckle 132 
Blossom. On observing a. (S. T. 

Coleridge.) . . . .463 
Blossoms, To. (Herrick.) . . 34 
Blue Flowers. (Caroline Eus- 

tis.) 420 

Bouquet of Primroses. (M. E. 

Lee.) 67 

Bouquets of floral language . . 217 
Bowen, W. Wasted Flowers . 488 
Bowles, C. Death of the Flowers 271 
Brainard, J. G. C. To the Sweet- 
brier 115 

Bride of the Danube. (Miss Pick- 

ersgill.) 87 

Briggs, Caroline A. Morning . 370 
Brooks, C. T. Christmas-tree . 307 
Broom, Poesy of the . . .209 
Browning, Mrs. E. B. A Dead 

Rose 281 

Hector in the Garden . . 442 

Lessons from the Gorse . 512 

Bryant, William C. Child and 

the Lily .... 73 

Fringed Gentian, To the . 274 

March 410 

November .... 270 

October .... 501 

Yellow Violet .... 44 

Buchanan, R. Pansies . . 80 
Burns, Robert. Emblems of Flow- 
ers 515 

Lilac, The .... 176 

— — Their Groves of Sweet Myrtle 119 

Thrush, The. . . .317 

To a Mountain Daisy . . 17 

Buttercups. (Eliza Cook.) . 52 

— and Daisies. (Mary Howitt.) . 535 

— Poesy of 52 

Butterfly in a Crowded Street. 

(W. P. Palmer.) . . . 379 

— To the. (Rogers.) . . . 344 
Byron, Lord. Alpine Violet . 41 

I send the Lilies. . . .75 

The Willow .... 141 

Zuleika's Rose ... 99 

Camoens. The Rose . . .106 
Campbell, Calder. Ivy . . .180 

Sweet Sedge . . .212 

Campbell, Thomas. Field Flow- 
ers 187, 529 

Lady-Fern . . . .116 

Can you forget me? (Landon.) 92 
Captive and the Flowers. 

(Goethe.) .... 516 
Carew. To the Primrose . . 59 
Carrington. To a Primrose . 61 



Casimir. The Hyacinth . . 68 
Caulkins, Miss F. M. Rose Stand- 

ish 313 

Celandine, To the Small. (Words- 
worth.) 138 

Chateaubriand. Jeune Fille et 

Jeune Fleur .... 344 
Chaucer. The Daisy ... 16 
Child and the Autumn-leaf. (S. 

Lover.) .... 507 

— and the Lily. (Bryant.) . . 73 
Childhood (anon.) . . .333 
Children of the Sun's First Glanc- 
ing. (Schiller.). . . 521 

Chosen Tree, The. (Estelle.) . 491 
Christmas-day. (Charles Harvey.) 304 

— tree. (Rev. C. T. Brooks.) . 307 
Chrysanthemums. (Wm. P. Pal- 
mer.) 287 

Churchill. Perfume of Jasmine 122 
City Lyric, A. (T. Westwood.) 466 
Clover, Poesy of the . . .193 
Coleridge. Hartley. Anemone 499 

Gold Fishes . . . .382 

Coleridge, Samuel T. On observ- 
ing a Blossom . . .463 

The Lily .... 75 

Work without Hope . . 514 

Collins, William. Ode to Evening 372 
Come let us go to the land. (B. 

W. Procter.) . . .409 
Constancy. (Moore.) . . .150 
Cook, Eliza. The Bay . . 153 

Buttercup . . . .52 

Going a-Maying ... 57 

The Holly . . . .204 

Moorland Blossoms . . 171 

Song for the Season . . 509 

Corinna, To, to go a-Maying. 

(Herrick.) .... 455 
Corn-flower, Poesy of the . . 186 
" Cornwall. Barry" (pseud.). See 

Procter, B. W. 
Cowley, Abraham. Sweet-william 167 
Cowper, William. The Jasmine 120 

Narcissus .... 49 

Cowslip, The. (Miss Landon.) . 29 

— The. (Mrs. Sigourney.) . 27 

— Poesy of the . . . .26 
Cowslips. (Mary Howitt.) . 27 
Cricket, Grasshopper and (anon.) 375 
Crocus, Poesy of the ... 29 

— To a. (Barton.) . . .30 

— To the. (Patterson.) . . 32 
Croly. Lily of the Valley . . 73 
Cunningham, Allan. Town and 

Country Child . . .339 
Cupid and the Dial (anon.) . . 352 
Cyprus, Poesy of the . . .188 

— tree. (Blackwood.) . . . 190 

— Wreath. The. (Scott.) . . 189 
Daffodil, Poesy of the . . . 35 

— (Herrick.) .... 36 

— (Wordsworth.) .... 37 
Dahlia, The. (Martin.) . . 157 

— Poesy of the .... 156 
Daisie, The. (Chaucer.) . . 16 
Daisies, Buttercups and . . 535 
Daisy, The. (Wordsworth.) 16, 428 

— Poesy of the . . . .15 

— To the Mountain. (Burns.) . 17 



Flowers 



170 



Dana, Richard H. Flowers sent 

during illness . . . 523 

Dandelion, The. (James R. Low- 
ell.) 525 

Danube, Bride of the. (Miss Pick- 

ersgill.) .... 87 

Darby, Miss. " The Lord of Life 

walked .... 183 

Darwin, E. The Mimosa . . 109 

Dav in June. (Jas. R. Lowell.) 331 

Dead Leaves. (Ella Ingram.) . 195 

— Rose. A. (Mrs. Browning.) . 281 
Death of the Flowers. (C. Bowles.) 271 
Dialogue from Soul Gardening. 

(.Green well.) .... 162 
Dialogues with Flowers . . 213 
Dickens. Charles. Ivy Green, The 178 
Dixon, James. Indian Summer 277 
Drayton. Angry Violets . . 42 

— Gillyflower, The . . .168 
Drop of Dew, The (anon.) . . 350 
Dying Rosebud, The. (Mrs. Os- 
good.) 97 

Early Morning— a sonnet. (Miss 

A. E. Starr.) ... 407 
Echo and Narcissus. (Milton.) . 47 
Eglantine, Tulip and . . . 462 
Elliott, E. Flowers for the Heart 522 
Elm Sylph, The. (H. W. Parker.) 498 
Elton. The Rose . ... 103 
Emblems of Flowers. (Burns.) 515 
Emerson, R. W. The Rhodora . 530 

The Snow-storm . . .293 

Eustis, Caroline. Blue Flowers 420 
Evening, Ode to. (Collins.) . 372 

— Rainbow. (Robt. Southey.) . 435 
Evergreens. (Pinckney.) . . 326 
Fading Autumn. (Mrs. E. L. Kin- 

nev.) 275 

Falls of the Passaic. (Irving.) . 486 
Fancy. (John Keats.) . . 267 
Farewell to the Flowers. (Mrs. 

Sigourney.) . . .272 
Field Flowers. (Campbell.) 187, 529 
Fine Weather in May. (Leigh 

Hunt.) 450 

Fire-fly. The. (B. W. Procter.) 473 
Fust of December. (.Robt. 

Souther.) .... 294 

— of January. (Robt, Southey.) 318 
Flora. Arcadian hymn to . . 398 
Floral Poesy. Mrs. Kirtland. See 

Flowers. 
Flower Angels, Song of. (Mrs. 

Hale.) 367 

— Dialogues 213 

— Game . .... 222 

— Language, Modification of . 221 

— The. (George Herbert.) . . 531 

— To a (anon.) .... 452 

— To a, (H. W. Parker.) . . 330 
Flowers (anon.) .... 417 

— Autumn. (Caroline Southey.) 474 

— Birthday (anon.) . . .508 

— Blue. (Caroline Eustis.) . . 420 

— Captive and the. (Goethe.) 516 

— Death of the. (C. Bowles.) . 271 

— Emblems of. (Burns.) . . 515 

— Farewell to the. (Mrs. Sigour- 

ney.) 272 

— Field. (Campbell.) . . 187, 529 



Flowers for the Heart. (E.Elliott.) 522 

— Hymn to the. (Horace Smith.) 439 

— Language of . . . . 225 

— (H. W. Longfellow.) . . .404 

— (B. W. Procter.) ... 425 

— Reaper and the . . . 484 

— sent during illness. (R. H. 

Dana.) 523 

— (Mrs. E. Oakes Smith.) . . 468 

— Songs and Chorus of. (Leigh 

Hunt.). . 475 

— Use of. (Mary Howitt.) . .495 

— Wasted. (W. Bowen.) . . 488 

— Wild (anon.) . . . .156 
Forget-me-not .... 89 

(John Ingram.) . . 92 

(Moir.) .... 89 

(New Mon. Magazine.) . . 91 

On a. (Mrs. Kemble.) . 297 

Poesy of the . . . .87 

Song of the .... 91 

Fountain, The (anon.) . . .366 
Fox-glove, Poesy of the . . 168 
Friendship Flower. (Milnes.) . 323 
Fuchsia, Poesy of the . . . 169 
Game of Flowers .... 222 
Garcilasso, Sonnet from . . 145 
Garden, The. (Andrew Marvell.) 422 
Garland, The. (Moore.) . . 144 
Gather ye Rose-buds. (Herrick.) 107 

— your Roses .... 104 
Gay, John. The Narcissus . 51 
Gentian, Fringed, To the. (Bry- 
ant.) 274 

Gilliflower, Evening (anon.) . 483 

— The. (Drayton.) . . .168 
Go, lovely Rose. (Waller.). .353 
Goethe. Captive and the Flowers 516 

— Little Red Rose . . . .349 

— The Violet .... 57 
Going a-Maying. (Eliza Cook.) . 57 

— a-Maying. (J. Ingram.) . 56 
Gold Fishes. (Hartler Coleridge.) 382 
Grant, Mrs. Sprig of Heath . 173 
Grasshopper and Cricket (anon.) 375 
Grave at Greenwood . . . ' 302 
Green-house Rose. (Charlotte 

Smith.) .... 305 
Greenwell, Dora. Dialogue from 

Soul-Gardening . . 162 

Greenwood, Grace (pseud.). See 

Lippincott, Sara J. 
Grief's Neglect. (Tennyson.) . 502 

Ground Ivy 180 

Habington, Wm. Night . . 436 
Hale, Sarah J. Song of the Flow- 
er Angels .... 367 
Harebell, Poesv of the . . .205 

— The. (R. Heber.) . . .205 

— The. (Scott.) .... 208 

— The. (C. Symonds.) . . "207 
Harvey, Charles. Christmas-day 304 
Hawthorn, Poesy of ... 54 

— To the. (Ronsard.) ... 54 
Hearfs-ease .... 82 

(Marv Howitt.) ... 79 

(Mrs. Sheridan) ... 81 

Poesy of the .... 78 

Heath— Moorland Blossoms. (Eli- 
za Cook.) .... 171 

— Sprig of. (Mrs. Grant.) . . 173 



171 



Flowers 



164, 



Heber, Reginald. The Harebell 
Hector in the Garden. (Mrs. 

Browning.) 
Heliotrope, The . 

— " The enamored of the Sun " 
Henians, Mrs. F. D. Orange- 
bough, The 

The Primrose .... 

Song of the Rose 

— — Vernal Showers 
Herbert, Geoi'ge. The Flower 
Herrick. Robert. Blossoms . 
Corinna to go a-Maying . 

— — Daffodils 

— — Gather ye Roses . 

Naming of the Wall-flower . 

Primroses .... 

To a Willow-tree . 

Herz Blume. Die. (Hood.) 
Hoffman. Withering, — withering 
Holly. Poesy of the . 

— The. (Eliza Cook.) . 

— tree, The. (R. Southey.) 
Hollyhock, Poesy of the 
Holmes, O. W. Pimpernel 

Star and Water-lily 

Honeysuckle, Poesy of the 

— The. (Blessington.) . 
Honevsuckles. (Keats.) . 
Hood, Thomas. The Moon . 

Rosemary — Die Herz Blume 

The Sunflower 

Une Pensee .... 

House and Grounds. (Leigh 

Hunt.) 

Howitt, Mary. Buttercups and 

Daisies 

Cowslips .... 

Heart*s-ease .... 

Midsummer Legend . 

Snow-drop, The 

Use of Flowers . 

Human Seasons, The. (Keats.) . 
Humming-bird, To the. (Char 

lotte Smith.) . 
Hunt, Leigh. Fine Weather in 

May 

House and Grounds . 

Lilies .... 

Poppies 

Roses .... 

Sweet-brier . 

Violets .... 

Hunter, Mrs. The Primrose 
Hyacinth, Poesy of the . 

— The. (Casimir.) 
Hyacinthus. (Keats.) . 

I send the lilies given to me. 

(Byron.) 

In Clover. (Walter Thornbury.) 
Indian Jasmine flower. (Ryan.) 

— Summer. (James Dixon. ) . 
Ingelow, Jean. Persephone 
Ingram, Ella. Dead Leaves . 

— John. Forget-me-not 
Going a-Maying . 

Irving, W. Falls of the Passaic . 
Ivy. (Calder Campbell.) . 

— The. (Barton.) . 

— Green, The. (Charles Dickens. ) 
January, First of . 



27 

, 79 
335 

. 20 
495 

. 380 

. 127 

450 
3-13 
470 
476 
475 
477 
477 
65 
07 



m 



121, 



(Cha- 



Jasmine, Night-scenting. (Moore.) 121 

— Perfume of. (Churchill.) 

— Poesy of the . 

— The. (Cowper.) . 

— The. (Moore.) 

— To the. (Jane Taylor.) 

— tree. To a. (Morpeth.) . 
Jeune Fille et Jeune 1 leur 

teaubriand.) 
Jonson, Ben. To the Narcissus 
June. (Mary Noel Meigs.) 
Keats. John. Fancy . 

Honeysuckles . 

Human Seasons . 

Hyacinthus . 

Keen fitful gusts 

Myrtle, A . 

Narcissus. The . 

Ode on Melancholy 

Primroses .... 

Keble. John. The Rose-bud 

To the Snow-drop ' . 

Kemble, Mrs. Forget-me-not 
Kinney, Mrs. E. C. Fading Au 

tumn 

Kruniniacher. The Moss Rose 
Lady-fern. (Campbell.) . 
Landon, Letitia E. Apple Bios 

soms 

Can You Forget Me? 

Cowslip, The 

Drooping Willow . 

Legacy of the Roses . 

Narcissus. The 

Sunflower, The . 

Violets 42 

Langhorne. Evening Primrose 110 
Last Autumnal Walk. (Win. P. 

Palmer.) 

— Rose of Summer. (Moore.) 
Late Spring. (Southey.) . 
Laurel. Poesy of the 

— The. (Tasso.) . 

— The. (Wordsworth.) 



122 
119 
120 
123 
123 
120 

344 
49 
459 
267 
137 



279 
118 

51 
505 

63 
346 

21 



275 
105 
116 

33 

92 

29 

145 

106 

52 

148 



. 103 
449 

. 150 
152 

. 154 



Laurustinus. The. (Jas. Mont- 
gomery.) .... 298 
Lee, M. E. Bouquet of Primroses 67 
Legacy of the Roses . . .106 
Lessons from the Gorse . . 512 
Life. (Charles Mackay.) . . 469 
Lilac, The. (Burns. ) . . .176 

— The. (Mrs. Sigourney.) . . 175 

— The. (Thomson.) . . .175 
Lilies. (Leigh Hunt.) . . 476 

— Bouquet of. (Wordsworth.) . 161 
Lily, Closing. (Tennyson.) . 162 

— of the Valley. (Cr'oly.) . . 73 
Poesy of the ... 72 

— The. (Coleridge.) . . .75 

— The. (James G. Percival.) 74, 388 

— the, Poesy of ... 160 
Lippincott. Sara J. May Morning 433 

349 
533 
404 
484 
. 176 

507 
525 
334 



Little Red Rose. (Goethe.) 
Longfellow, H. W. April . 

Flowers .... 

Reaper and the Flowers 

Lotus, The. (Tennyson.) 
Lover, Samuel. Child and 

tumn Leaf 
Lowell. J. R. Dandelion . 
— Day in June 



Au- 



Flowers 



172 



438 
537 



433 
45!) 



121 



Lowell, J. R. Winter-piece . 291 

— Maria. The Morning-glory . 359 
Mackay, Charles. Lk'e . . 469 
Malesherbes. Sur la Mort d'une 

Jeime Fille .... 354 
March. (W. C. Bryant.) . . 410 
Marigold, Poesy of the . . 158 

— The. (G. Withers.) . . .159 
Martin. The Dahlias . . .157 
Martineau, Harriet. Song for 

August .... 472 
Marvell, Andrew. The Garden . 422 
May. (James G. Percival.) 

— (N. P. Willis.) . 

— Morning, The. (Sara J. Lip 

pincott.) .... 
Meigs, Mary Noel. June . 
Melancholy, Ode on. (John Keats.) 505 
Midsummer Legend. (Mary How- 

itt.) 355 

Milnes. Friendship Flower . 323 
Milton, John.' Echo and Narcissus 47 
Mimosa, The. (E. Darwin.) . 109 
Mirror, To a. (De La Vega.) . 48 
Mistletoe, Poesy of the . . . 197 

— Under the 198 

Modifications of Flower Language 221 
Moir, D. M. Forget-me-not 

Wall-flower, The . 

Montgomery, James. Laurusti- 

nus, The 
Moon, The. (Hood.) 
Moore. Thomas. Constancy 

Garland, The . 

Jasmine, The 

Last Rose of Summer . 

Ode from Anacreon . 

Sunflower— Constancy . 

Moorland Blossoms. (Eliza Cook. 
Morning. (Caroline A. Briggs.) 

— Early. (Miss A. E. Starr.) . 

— glory, The. (Maria Lowell.) 
Morpeth. To a Jasmine-tree . 
Moss-rose, The. (Krummacher.) 
Moss-giel. (Wordsworth.) . 
Moultrie, J. Violets 
My Heart's my Green-house 
Myrtle, A. (John Keats.) 
Myself. (H. E. G. Arey.) . 
Narcissus (anon.) . 

— (Cowper.) .... 
-The. (Gay.) . . 

— The. (Landon.) 

— The. (Keats.) . 

— and Echo. (Milton.) 

— Death of. (Addison.) 

— Poesy of the . 

— To a Mirror . 

— To the. (Ben Jonson.) . 
New Year, The. (Tennyson.) 
Night. (Wm. Habington.) 

— blooming Cereus 
Nightshade. The (anon.) . 
Nocturnal Reverie. (Countess of 

Winchelsea.) . . . 493 
Not to myself Alone (anon.) . . 395 
November. (Bryant.) . . 270 
October— a sonnet. (Bryant.) . 501 
Ode from Anacreon. (Moore.) . 10-! 
Opening Year, The. (Shelley.) . 316 
Orange-blossom, Poesy of the . 126 



84 

298 
480 
150 
144 
123 
103 
104 
150 
) 171 
370 
407 

120 

105 

431 

41 

327 

118 

301 

48 

49 

51 

52 

51 

r, 

4^ 
46 
4? 
4$. 

33- 
436 

276 
376 



Orange-bough, The. (Mrs. He- 
mans.) ..... 128 

— tree, The. (Spenser.) . . 126 

To an. (Wm. P. Palmer.) . 288 

Origin of Dimples (anon.) . . 453 
Osgood. Mrs. Dying Rose-bud . 97 
Palmer, Wm. P. Butterfly in a 

crowded street . . . 379 

Chrysanthemums . . 287 

Last Autumnal Walk . . 283 

Orange-tree, To an . , 288 

Pansies. (R. Buchanan.) . . 80 
Pansy, Origin of name of . . 79 
Parker, H. W. The Elm Sylph . 498 

— — To a Flower . . .330 
Passaic, Falls of the. (Irving.) . 486 
Passion-flower, Poesy of the . 199 

The (anon.) . . . . 201 

To the. (Barton.) . . 200 

Patterson. To the Crocus . . 32 
Percival, James G. The Lily 74, 388 

May 438 

Percy. Wearing the Willow . 142 
Periwinkle, Poesy of the . . 155 
Persephone. (Jean Ingelow.) . 35 
Petition for an Absolute Retreat . 390 
Phrases in flower-language . 213 
Pickersgill, Miss. Bride of the 

Danube .... 87 
Pimpernel. (Holmes.) . . 77 

— Poesy of the .... 76 
Pinckney. Evergreens . . . 326 
Pire, Christine. I give to thee the 

Autumn Rose ... 10 
Poppies. (Leigh Hunt) . . .478 
Poppy, Poesy of the . . . 124 
Pratt, Miss. To the Autumn . 129 
Prentice, George D. Sabbath 

Evening 385 

Primrose, Early. (Kirke White.) 63 

— Evening, The. (Langhorne.) . 110 

— Poesy of the .... 59 

— The. (Mrs. Hemans.) . . 62 

— The. (Mrs. Hunter.) . . 65 

— To a. (Carrington.) . . .64 

— To the. (Carew.) ... 59 
Primroses. (Keats.) . . .63 

— a bouquet. (M. E. Lee.) . 67 

— Sad. (Wilson.) .... 64 

— To. (Herrick.) ... 66 
Procter, Bryan W. Come let us go 409 

Fire-fly, The . . .473 

Flowers 425 

From the Rape of Proser- 
pine 135 

In Praise of Spring . . 408 

To the Snow-drop . . .527 

Question, The. (Shelley.) . . 135 
Rape of Proserpine. (B. W. 

Procter.) . . . . 135 

Real Faith 150 

Reaper and the Flowers. (Long- 
fellow.) .... 484 
Reynolds, J. H. The Water-lily 164, 166 
Rhodora, The. (Emerson.) . . 530 
Robinson, Mrs. The Snow-drop 24 
Rogers, Samuel. To the Butterfly 344 
Ronsard. To the Hawthorn . 54 
Rose, A Dead. (Mrs. Browning.) 281 
Rose-bud, Dying:. (Mrs. Osgood.) 97 
The. (Keble.) . . .346 



173 



Flowers 



Rose-buds, Gather ye. (Herrick.) 107 

— Green-house .... 305 

— Lesson of a. (Spenser.) . 99 

— Little Red. - (Goethe.) . .319 

— Moss. (Krummacher.) . 105 
Rose of Summer, Last. (Moore.) 103 

— on New- Year's Day, To a . 3io 

— Poesy of the . . . .94 

— Song of the. (Hemans.) . 100 

— The (anon.) 100 

— The. (Beaumont and Fletcher.) 516 

— The. (Camoens.) . . .106 

— The. (Elton.) .... 103 

— To a Withered . . . .329 

— Zuleika's. (Byron.) . 99 
Rosemary— Die Herz Blume. 

(Hood.) .... 71 

— Herb. (Kirke White.) . . 70 

— Poesy of the .... 69 
Roses. (Leigh Hunt.) . . . 475 

— Gather your 104 

— Legacy of the. (Landon.) . 106 

— White. (Sarah L. P. Smith.) 387 
Ryan. Indian Jasmine Flower . 122 
Sabbath Evenings. (Geo. D. 

Prentice.) . . . .385 
Saint John's Wort, Symbolism of 12 
Sawyer, William. Through the 

Fields 125 

Schiller. Children of the Sun's 

First Glancing . . .521 
Scott. Cypress Wreath, The . 189 

— The Harebell .... 208 

— The Setting Sun . . . .497 
Sedge, Sweet, Poesy of the . 211 
Sensitive Plant, Poesy of the . 108 

The. (Shelley.) ... 503 

Setting Sun, The. (Scott.) . . 497 
Shakespeare, W. The Violet. 384 

A Violet Bank . . .43 

The Willow. . . . 143 

Woodbine . . . .133 

Shamrock, Poesy of the . . 193 
Shelley, P. B. Amaranth, The . 182 

Bouquet of Violets . . 43 

■ Opening Year, The . .316 

Question, The . . . 135 

Sensitive Plant, The . . 5( 3 

Sunflower, The . . .149 

To a fading Violet ... 40 

Sheridan, Mrs. Heart's-ease . 81 
Sigourney, Mrs. L. H. Cowslip, 

The 27 

Farewell to the Flowers . 272 

Lilac, The .... 175 

Smith, Charlotte. Close of Spring. 457 

— — Green-house Rose . . 305 

To the Humming-bird . . 127 

Smith, Mrs. E. Oakes. Flowers 468 

Teachings of Eva . . .468 

Smith, Horace. Hymn to the 

Flowers 439 

Smith, Sarah L. P. White Roses 38 1 ; 
Snow-drop, Poesy of the . .1! 

The (anon.) .... 2 

The. (Mrs. Howitt. . . 2< 

The. (Mrs. Robinson.) . % 

The. (Westwood.) . . V: 

The. (Wordsworth.) . 2< 

To the. (Keble.) ... 21 

To the. (B. W. Procter.) . 527 



Snow-storm, The. (R. W. Emer- 
son.) 

Song. — ' ' A spirit haunts. ' ' (Ten- 
nyson.) 

— for the Season. (Eliza Cook.) 
Sonnets: Early Morning. Miss 

A. E. Starr .... 

— Evening Rainbow. (Southey.) 

— Garcilasso. From . 

— Grasshopper and Cricket . 

— Human Seasons. (Keats.) . 

— Keen fitful gusts. (Keats.) 

— Late Spring. (Southey.) 

— October. (Bryant.) . 

— Sweet is the Rose. (Spenser.) 

— Violet, The, No. 99. (Shakes- 

peare.) .... 

— Winter. (Southey.) . 
South, The. (R. H. Stoddard.) 
Southey, Caroline. Autumn 

Flowers .... 

Sweet-scented Cyclamen 

Southey, Robert. Evening Rain- 
bow . 
First of December 

— — First of January 

Holly-tree, The . 

Late Spring . 

Sun, The . 

Valentine 

Winter — a sonnet 

Spenser, Edmund. Lesson of a 

Rose 

The Orange-tree . 

Sweet is the Rose 

Spring, Close of. (Charlotte 

Smith.) .... 

— In Praise of. (B. W. Procter.) 

— in the Lap of Winter (anon.) 

— - Song, A. (Edward Youl.) 
Standish, Rose. (Miss Caulkins.) 
Star and Water-lily. (O. W. 

Holmes.) ... 164, 
Starr, Miss A. E. Early Morning 

— a sonnet .... 
Stoddard, R. H. South, The . 

— — Summer 

Sun, The. (Southey.) 
Sunflower. (Shelley.) . 

— "Constancy." (Moore.) 

— The. (Hood.) . 

— The. (Landon.) 

— The. (Thomson.) 

— Poesy of the .... 

— To the 

Sur la Mort d'une Jeune Fille. 

(Malesherbes.) 
Swain, Charles. The Aspen-tree 
Sweet-brier. (Leigh Hunt.) 
To the. (Brainard.) 

— is the Rose. (Spenser.) 

— pea, Poesy of the . 

— scented Cyclamen. (Mrs. 

Southey.) . 

— Sedge. The. (Calder Camp- 

bell.) . 

— william. (Cowley.) 

Poesy of 

Symbolism of flowers . 
Symonds, C. The Harebell 
Tasso. The Laurel 



293 

471 
509 

407 
435 
145 
375 
280 
279 
449 
501 
520 

384 
286 
299 

474 
311 

435 
294 
318 
202 
449 
427 
464 



520 

457 
408 
397 
412 
313 

377 

407 
299 
458 
427 
149 
150 
149 
148 
147 
146 
147 

354 

184 
477 
115 
520 
178 

311 

212 

167 
167 
213 

207 
152 



Flowers 
For 



174 



Tavlor. Jane. To the Jasmine 123 

Teachings of Eva. (Mrs. E . Oakes 

Smith.) .... 468 

Tennyson, Alfred. Grief's Neg- 
lect ' .... 502 

Lotus, The . . . .170 

New- Year, The . . . 332 

Red Anemone . . . 13J 

Song—" A spirit haunts " 471 

Their groves o 1 sweet myrtle. 

(Burns.) .... 119 

There's a tongue in every leaf 

(anon.) .... 337 

Thistle. Poesy of the 191 

Thomson. James. The Lilac . 175 

The Sunflower . . .147 

Thornbury. Walter. In Clover 194 

Thou Giver of all ( anon. ) . . 447 

Through the Fields. (Wm. Saw- 
yer.) 125 

Thrash. The. (Burns.) . . 317 

Town and Country Child. (Cun- 
ningham.) .... 333 

Transmigration (anon.) . . 322 

Trembling Poplar. See Aspen. 

Tulip and Eglantine (anon.) . 462 

Under the Mistletoe . . .198 

UnePensee. (Hood.) . . .163 

Utility of flowers in the Arts . 13 

Valentine. (Southey.) . . . 464 

Vega, De La. To a mirror . 48 

Verbena. Wild, Poesy of the . 210 

Vernal Shower, The. (Mrs. He- 
mans.) 426 

Vervain, Poesy of the . . 210 

Violet. Alpine 41 

— Bank, A. (Shakespeare.) . 43 

— Poesy of the . . . . 33 

— The. (Goethe.) ... 43 

— The— a sonnet. (Shakespeare.) 384 

— To a fading. (Shelley.) . 40 

— Yellow. (Bryant.) ... 44 
Violets. (Leigh Hunt.) . . 477 

— (Landon.) 42 

— (J.Moultrie.) . . . . 41 

— Angry. (Drayton.) . . .42 

— Bouquet of. (Shelley.) . . 43 
Vocabulary of Flowers . . . 225 
Voice of the Grass . . . 415 

Flowers, Reaper and the. (Longfellow.) 

— sent during illness. (R H. Dana.) - 

— Songs and. (Leigh Hunt.) - 

— The ------- - 

— The. (Henry Bacon.) 

— Use of. (Mary Howitt.) - 

— Wasted. (W. Bowen.) ----- 

— Wild (anon.) ------ 

— winter flowers, the child is dead - 
Fluellen, an officer, c. in Henry v. 
Flush, my dog, To ----- - 

— or Faunus ------- 

Flute, a bellows-mender, c. in Mids. N. Dream 
Fluttering soul, what dost thou here - 

— spread thy purple pinions - 



Wall-flower, Naming of the. 

(Herrick.) .... 86 

Poesy of the .... 83 

The (anon.) .... 86 

The. (D. M. Moir.) . . 84 

Waller. Edmund. Go, lovely 

rose 353 

Wasted Flowers. (W. Bowen.) . 488 
Water-lilies. (E. R. B.) . . 161 

— lily, Star and the. (Holmes.) 377 

The. (J. H. Reynolds.) 164, 166 

Weeping- willow. Poesy of the . 141 
Westwood, T. City Lyric . . 466 

The Snow-drop ... 19 

White, Henry Kirke. Early Prim- 
rose. 63 

Herb Rosemary ... 70 

Whitman, Mrs. Still day in Au- 
tumn 479 

To a withered Rose . . 329 

Wild Flowers .... 156 
Willis, N. P. May . . . .537 
Willow, Drooping. (Landon.) . 145 

— The. (Byron.) . . . .141 

— The. (Shakespeare.) . . 143 

— tree, To a. (Herrick.) . . 144 

— Wearing the. (Percy.) . . 142 
Wilson. Sad Primrose . . 64 
Winchelsea, Countess of. Noc- 
turnal Reverie . . . 493 

Petition for an absolute Re- 
treat 390 

Winter— a sonnet. (Southey.) . 286 

— piece. (James R. Lowell.) . 291 
Withering — withering. (Hoffman.) 196 
Withers, G. The Marigold . 159 
Woodbine. (Shakespeare.) . . 133 
Wordsworth, W. Bouquet of Lilies 161 

Daffodils .... 37 

Daisy, The . . . 16, 428 

Laurel, The .... 154 

Mossgiel 431 

Small Celandine, To the . 138 

Snow drop, The . . .20 

Work without Hope. (S. T. Cole- 
ridge.) 514 

Wreaths 136 

Youl, Edward. Spring Song . 412 
Zuleika's Rose. (Byron.) . . 99 

Flo. 484 

Flo. 523 

Flo. 475 

Sen. 45 

Fav. 221 

Flo. 495 

Flo. 488 

Flo. 156 

Flo. 522 

Sha. 439 

Bro. 79 

Bro. 89 

Sha. 161 

Wes. 35 

Pope 388 



1 *7X Flowers 

1 i O For 

Fly and the bullock - - - - - Moore 573 

— and the false gods P. of F. 113 

— dearest fly ! He is not nigh - - - Goe. 73 

— Death of the ------- Goe. 236 

— envious time, till thou run out - - - Mil. 414 

— fro the presse and dwell - - Clia. 597 ; Fav. 324 

— from the world, O Bessy, to me - - Moore 89 

— leaf, Lines on a - - - - - - Whi. 339 

— not thus, my brow of snow - - - Moore 48 

— not yet - - - - - ■• - Moore 216 

— some kind harbinger — a sonnet - - Wor. 261 
Flying fish, To the - - - - - Moore 117 

Foil, The - Her. 278 

Fold thy hands, thy work is over. (E. H. W.) Whi. 396 

Folk songs Lon. 399 

Follen --------- Whi. 96 

Follow, happy Eadna ! - - - - - I. S. S. 66 

Follow my page, where the green grass - - Mer. 237 

— to the deep wood's weeds - - - - She. 503 
Folly loves the martyrdom of fame - - Byron 275 

— of learning wisdom in retirement - - Gol. 520 
Fond kiss, Ae — a song - Burns 232 

— words have oft been spoken to thee - Wor. 228 

— youth ! who dream'st that hoarded gold - Cow. 520 
Fontenelle, Miss, Address spoken by - - Burns 139 

— Miss, Letter to - - - - - Burns 502 

— Miss, On seeing the acting of - Burns 181 

— Miss, Spoken by, on her benefit night - Burns 147 
Food for powder ------ Sha. 402 

— in travel -------- Goe. 216 

Fool slides o'er the ice that - Sha. 639 

Foolish world, who canst not find - - - Wes. 332 

Fools are my theme, let satire be my song - Byron 177 

— rush in where angels fear to tread - - Pope 57 

— we may have in plenty - - - -" Sch. 265 

— which each man meets in his dish - - Dry. 479 

— epilogue, The Goe. 227 

Foot-path, The Low. 376 

Footsteps of angels Lon. 4 

Fop," a dog, Epitaph on - Cow. 492 

For a cap and bells our lives we play - - Low. 107 

— a praiseworthy object we're now gathered Goe. 98 

— a' that an' a' that. (Burns.) - Fav. 123; Scott 386 

— action born, existing to be tried - - - Wor. 315 

— ages an edifice here has been found - - Sch. 195 

— ages on our river borders - Whi. 215 

— all that fair is, is by nature - - - Spe. 657 

— all that friendship, all that love - - - Wor. 592 

— all things must die ----- Ten. 467 

— Brutus is an honorable man - - - - Sha. 777 



For i 7 p. 

Forget-me-not x ' " 

For courage mounteth with occasion - - Sha. 335 

— Daphne's laurel Phoebus gave - - - Flo. 145 

— easy things that may be got at will - - Spe. 691 

— even Israfil - - - - - - P. of F. 22 

— ever - - Goe. 206 

— ever and a day ------ Sha. 222 

— every day well spent I count a year - Fav. 161 

— every dram of honey therein found - - Spe. 339 

— every moment hath its own to-morrow Wor. 697 

— folded flocks on fruitful plains - - - Dry. 558 

— fools admire, but men of sense - - - Pope 51 

— forms of government let fools contest - - Pope 209 

— genius made his cabin wide - - - Erne. 275 
■ — gentlest uses, ofttimes nature takes - - Wor. 296 

— God hath marked each sorrowing - - Bry. 36 

— greatest scandal waits on greatest state - Sha. 1020 

— her own person, it beggared all description Sha. 919 

— I am nothing, if not critical - - - - Sha. 886 

— I am proverbed with a grandsire - - Sha. 717 

— I dipt into the future Ten. 92 

— I who hold sage Homer's rule the best - Pope 286 

— I'm to be queen of the May, mother - - Ten. 42 

— in a letter, we have not better - - - Erne. 290 

— in that sleep what dreams may come - - Sha. 826 

— it so falls out that what - Sha. 127 

— it stirs the blood in an old man's heart - Wil. 93 

— lack of gold, she's left me - - - Burns 320, 321 

— leagues along the watery way - - - Scott 434 

— lords or kings I dinna mourn - - - Burns 115 

— love is a celestial harmony - Spe. 657 

— love is heaven, and heaven is love - - Scott 17 

— me my friend, — ------ She. 501 

— me she stooped, and looking round - - Flo. 208 

— modes of faith let graceless zealots - - Pope 209 

— my dagger is bathed in the blood of the brave She. 558 

— my heart is true as steel - Sha. 165 

— my voice I have lost it Sha. 413 

— nature, true and like in every place - - Erne. 279 

— nothing this wide universe I call - - Sha. 1041 

— of all sad words of tongue or pen - - Whi. 206 

— of the soul the body form doth take - *Spe. 657 

— shame, deny that thou bear'st - - - Sha. 1029 

— softness she, and sweet attractive grace - Mil. 91 

— stony limits cannot hold love out - - Sha. 720 

— sufferance is the badge - Sha. 184 

— the fairest maid in Hampton - - - Whi. 304 

— the first and last word in life's volume - Mer. 50 

— the future - Pro. 344 

— the grave of earth's best nobleness - - Wil. 116 

— the most loved are they - ■; - Hem. 315 



mFor 
Forget-me-not 

For the present reigns our monarch - - Fav. 386 

— the rare and radiant maiden - - - Poe 51 

— the sake of somebody — a song - - - Burns 260 

— the vain tribute of a smile - Scott 29 

— thee was a house built - - - - Lon. 20 

— them no more the blazing hearth - - Fav. 30 

— there was never yet philosopher - - Sha. 129 

— this relief much thanks - Sha. 811 

— this true nobleness — a sonnet - - - Low. 20 

— time will teach thee soon the truth - - Lon. 37 

— to visit my ewes and to see my lambs - Burns 294 

— transfigured she rose from the place - - Mer. 67 

— weeks the clouds had raked the hills - Whi. 327 

— what contend the wise? -■--•- - Wor. 368 

— what need I of book or priest - - - Erne. 276 

— what word is it bids us die - - - P. of F. 126 

— when the weary night had worn - - I. S. S. 57 

— where is any author in the world - - Sha. 149 

— who to dumb forgetfulness a prey - - Fav. 33 

— who would bear the whips and scorns - Sha. 826 

— woman due allowance make I - - - Goe. 367 
Foray, The. (Talisman.) ----- Scott 452 
Forbear to deem the chronicler unwise - Wor. 313 
Forbearance ----- Erne. 78; Mer. 469 

— Mutual -------- Cow. 431 

Forbes, lord viscount, Epistle to - - Moore 156 

Forbore the ant-hill, shunned to tread - - Erne. 275 

Force of prayer - - - - - - - Wor. 423 

Forced from home and all its pleasures - Cow. 447 

— recruit at Solferino - Bro. 614 
Ford, a gentleman, c. in Merry Wives of W. Sha. 42 

— Mistress, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - Sha. 42 
Foreheads villainous low -...-- Sha. 17 
Foreign travel. (Italy.) - - - - • - Rog. 122 
Foremost man of all this world - - - Sha. 781 
Forenoon, Sura of the - P. of F. 170 
Forerunners, The - Erne. 79; Her. 279 

Foresight - - Wor. 79 

Forest hymn, A - - - - Bry. 79 ; Fav. 38 

— sanctuary, The ------ Hem. 25 

Forever and forever farewell Cassius - - Sha. 784 

— flowing in a changeless peace - - - Arn. 60 

— fortune, wilt thou prove -' " - - - Tho. 468 

— hallowed be this morning fair - - - Wor. 357 
Forewarner, The - - - - - P. of F. 140 
Forget-me-not (anon.) ----- Flo. 89 

(John Ingram.) ------ Flo. 92 

(Moir.) - - ----- - Flo. 89 

(New Monthly Mag.) Flo. 91 

On a. (Mrs. Kemble.) - Flo. 297 

12 



Forget-me-not 1 7& 

France x * ° 

Forget-me-not, Poesy of the - Flo. 87 

Song of the ------ Flo. 91 

Forget not the field ----- Moore 260 

Forgetfulness, love, and pride - - - Ten. 469 

Forgive, illustrious country! these deep. sighs Wor. 314 

— niy partial selfishness - Wes. 183 
Forgiveness — a sonnet - - - - - Whi. 121 

Forgiver, The ------ P. of F. 40 

Forlorn, my love, no comfort near - - Burns 283 

— The -------- Low. 14 

Formalists, The ------- Wes. 162 

Formed by thy converse happily - - - Pope 220 

Forms of prayer at sea— a sonnet - . - - Wor. 378 

— of saints and kings are standing - - Lon. 93 
Forsaken -------- Lon. 391 

— hearth, The ------- Hem. 367 

— The - - - - - - Hood 158; Wor. 105 

Forster, WiUiam Whi. 187 

Fort Fuentes ------- Wor. 298 

Forth from a jutting ridge - .." - - - Wor. 140 

Fortinbras, c. in Hamlet - - - - - Sha. 811 

Fortune -------- Sch. 236 

— and wisdom ------- Sch. 53 

— I thank thee, gentle goddess - Cow. 25 

— of war — a song ------ Groe. 93 

— teller, The ------- Moore 264 

— To -------- Tho. 468 

Forty thousand brother could not - - Sha. 842 

Forum of women - - - - - - Sch. 260 

Forward I now in duties go - - - - Wes. 354 

Foscari, Francesco - Eog. 59 

Foster mother's tale, The - Col. 87 

Foul deeds will rise, though all the earth - Sha. 815 

Foules, Assembly of - - - - Cha. 578 

Found — a song ------- Goe. 27 

— (for a picture) — a sonnet - Eos. 301 

— dead. (Albert Laighton.) - Fa v. 65 

— thee a way out of his wreck - - - Sha. 612 
Foundation, The ------- Wes. 159 

Fount of the woods ! thou art hid - - - Hem. 343 

— of truth, The ----- - - Mer. 242 

Fountain, A ------ - Wor. 417 

— of oblivion, The ------ Henr. 238 

— of second youth ------ Sch. 259 

— of youth ------ Hoi. 289 ; Low. 359 

— The (anon.) - - - Flo. 366; Bry. 185; Eog. 127 

— The - Low. 10 ; Fav. 420 ; Whi. 36 
Four ages of the world ----- Sch. 118 

— ages, The -------- Cow. 498 

— bridges, The Ing. 166 



i 7Q Forget-me-not 

J- • & France 

Four by the clock Lon. 408 

— elements joined in harmonious strife - Sch. 120 

— favors, The - Goe. 363 

— fiery steeds, impatient of the rein - - "Wor. 239 

— lakes of Madison - - Lon. 409 

— limpid lakes— four Naiades - - - Lon. 409 

— princesses at Wilna, The — a sonnet - - Lon. 384 

— seasons fill the measure of the year - - Flo. 280 

— summers coined their golden light - - Hoi. 266 

— travelers, The - - - - - P. of F. 182 

— weeks they sailed, a speck in sky-shut seas Low. 356 

— winds, The ------- Lon. 144 

Fourfold aspect ------- Bro. 180 

Fourteenth century, Tale of the - - - Hem. 272 

Fourth of July ode, 187G Low. 416 

Fowler, Epitaph on a - - - - - Cow. 517 
Fox, Charles James, Inscribed to - - Burns 117 
Impromptu on death of Byron 155 

— and crane Goe. 237 

— and huntsman ------ Goe. 238 

— glove, Poesy of the - Flo. 168 
Fra Sebastiano, c. in Michelangelo - - Lon. 424 
Frae the friends and land I love - - Burns 235 
Fragment— "Awake, arise! - - - - Lon. 410 

— of a song Burns 196, 284 

— of a character ------ Moore 608 

— of mythological hymn to love - - Moore 162 

— of statue of Hercules ----- Eog. 245 

— of unfinished drama ----- She. 478 

— "The western gale" ----- White 260 
Fragments - - - Byron 131, 139, 263 ; White 366 

— of college exercises ----- Moore 69 

— of incomplete poem ---.'- Byron 268 

— on mutability - Spe. 499 

— on nature and life - Erne. 278 

— on the poet and poetic gift - - - Erne. 263 
Frailty- -------- Her. 156 

— of man — an essay ----- G 1. 514 

— thy name is woman Sha. 814 

Framed in the prodigality of nature - - Sha. 560 

— to make women false ----- Sha. 885 
Frampton, Mary, On monument of - - Dry. 318 
France — an ode Col. 130 

— In - - - - - - - - - Mer. 213 

— King of, c. in All's Well that Ends Well - Sha. 254 

— King of, c. in King Lear - Sha. 847 

— lily of, To the Byron 241 

— Negroes expelled from - Wor. 271 

— Ode to, 1848 ------- Low. 92 

-~ Residence in - Wor. 560 



Francini's iqa 

From 18 U 

Francini's ode to Milton ----- Cow. 551 

Francis, a friar, c. in Much Ado about Nothing Sha. Ill 

Francisca, a nun, c. in Measure for Measure - Sha. 67 

Francisco, a lord, c. in Tempest - - - Sha. 1 

— a servant, c. in Spanish Student - - - Lon. 44 

— a soldier, c. in Hamlet - Sha. 811 
Franconia from the Pemigewasset - - - Whi. 278 
Frank courtship, The ----- Cra. 29 

— hearted hostess of the field - Low. 329 
Frankeleynes tale, The ----- Cha. 309 
Franklin, Lady. (E. H. W.) - - - - Whi. 396 

— Sir John, on the cenotaph - Ten. 729 
Fraternal rage, the guilty Thebes alarms - Pope 405 
Fratres, Ad ------ - Her. 568 

Frederica, Princess, on her marriage - - Ten. 729 

Frederick and Alice ----- Scott 364 

— c. in As You Like It Sha. 205 
Free grace - - - - - - - Wes. 5, 192 

— heart, that singest to-day - Bro. 291 

— inquiry _.-_-__ Wes. 182 
Freebooter, The — a song ----- Gr e. .67 
Freedom -------- Erne. 172 

— (John Barbour.) ------ Fav. 325 

— has a thousand charms to show - - Cow. 137 

— in Brazil -------- Whi. 338 

— our queen - - Hoi. 155 

— Poems on ------ Low. 56, 98 

Freely the sage, though wrapt in musings - Dante 353 

Freind, for your epitaphs I'm grieved - - Pope 396 

Fremont, John C, To ----- whi. 263 

French and Spanish guerrillas - Wor. 282 

— army in Russia - Wor. 283 

— fleet, Ballad of the ------ Lon. 376 

— From the - Byron 253 ; Lon. 412 

— Ode from the - Byron 259 

— revolution, Histories of Wor. 439 
The - Wor. 190 

— Song from the - Scott 397 

Freres tale, The ------- Cha. 207 

Fresh spring, the herald of love's mighty king Spe. 699 

Freshly the cool breath - - - Wil. 43 ; Fav. 113 

Fret not, poor soul : while doubt - - - Pro. 388 

Friar's Carse hermitage, In Burns 113 

Friday first's the day appointed - - - Burns 92 

Fridolin - Sch. 173 

Friedland, Duchess of, c. in The Piccolomini Col. 407 

Friend, Epistle to a Rog. 210 

— Epitaph on a Burns 185 

— For a ------- Byron 242 

— i' the court is better ----- Sha. 433 



mFrancini's 
From 

Friend in distress - - - White 350 ; Cow. 610 

— Lines on a - Col. 46 

— of mine, whose lot is cast - Whi. 170 

— of my soul ! as with moist eye - - - Whi. 96 

— of my soul ! this goblet sip - Moore 76 

— of my youth ! when young vye roved - Byron 174 

— of the poet, tried and leal - Burns 147 

— of the slave and yet the friend - - - Whi. 137 

— of the wise ! and teacher of the good - Col. 176 

— on his marriage, To a Eog. 241 

— sorrow -------- Pro. 33 

— To a - - - - Col. 45, 55, 99, 175; Wor. 399 

— To a. (Daniel A. Drown.) - - - Fa v. 170 

— To a, on death of his sister - Whi. 138 

— To a, on return from Europe - - - Whi. 95 

— To a youthful - ----- Byron 228 

— to my life, which did not - Pope 265 

— you seem thoughtful ----- Hoi, 295 
Friendly meeting — a sonnet - Goe. 214 
Friends, At meeting of Hoi. 293 

— burial, The - Whi. 384 

— marriage, On a - - - - - - Wor. 231 

— of faces unknown - - - Bro. 615 ; Fav. 399 

— Romans, countrymen Sha. 777 

— To my - - - - - - - - Sch. 120 

Friendship - Cow. 408; Erne. 232; Ing. 400; Sch. 41 

— Book iv. of Faery Queen - - - - Spe. 281 

— Christian -------- Wes. 332 

— flower. (Milnes.) ----- Flo. 323 

— Happy — a song Burns 244 

— (In French) - Byron 256 

— is constant in all other things - - - Sha. 116 

— is. love without his wings - - - - Byron 169 

— Love and — an essay Gol. 371 

— On — an essay ------ Grol. 516 

Frietchie, Barbara ------ Whi. 269 

Fringed curtains of thine eye - - - Sha. 5 

— gentian, To the ----- - Bry. 128 

Frith of Clyde, On the -a sonnet - - - Wor. 404 

Frogs, The -------- Goe. 238 

Frolic architecture of the snow - - - Erne. 43 

From all but keen ambition will his soul - Wil. 200 

— Bolton's old monastic tower - - - Wor. 335 

— brightening fields of ether - Tho. 47 

— center to the circle, and so back - - Dante 289 

— child to youth, from youth - - - - Ros. 259 

— childhood's hour I have not been - - Poe 170 

— dawn to noon - - Ros. 266 

— dread Leucadia's frowning steep - - Moore 59 

— early youth I plowed the restless main - Wor. 403 



From 
Full 



182 



From earth I seem to wing my flight - - Sch. 26 

— fairest creatures we desire increase - - Sha. 1028 

— fall to spring the russet - Erne. 119 

— false assumption rose Wor. 362 

— gold to gray our mild sweet day - - Whi. 236 

— grave to gay, from lively to severe - - Pope 220 

— harmony, from heavenly harmony Dry. 533 ; Fav. 101 

— heaven these fell upon the foaming - - Goe. 381 

— heavy dreams fair Helen rose - - - Scott 355 

— high to higher forces Erne. 288 

— ■ him did forty million serfs - - - Eos. 298 

— his brimstone bed at break of day - - Col. 217 

— life without freedom ----- Moore 648 

— little down to least in due degree - - Wor. 376 

— low to high doth dissolution - Wor. 378 

— lowest place when virtuous things - - Sha. 262 

— my arm-chair - Lon. 395 

— my lone turret as I look around - - - Hoi. 195 

— nature doth emotion come - - - Wor. 585 

— nature's different mixtures free - - - Wes. 248 

— noiseful arms, and acts of prowess - - Ten. 405 

— off a hill whose concave womb - - - Sha. 1047 

— old Belerium to the northern main - - Pope 105 

— purity's own cherub mouth - - - Moore 420 

— right to left and to and fro - - - Cow. 608 

— rise of morn till set of sun - - - Moore 181 

— rite and ordinance abused they fled - Wor. 374 

— Roslin castle's echoing walls - - - Burns 295 

— Ross where the clouds on Benlomond - Scott 414 

— scenes like these old Scotia's grandeur Burns 53 

— Stirling castle we had seen - - - Wor. 259 

— Syria's thousand minarets - - - Moore 420 

— that time forward, authority in France - Wor. 575 

— the baptismal hour thro' weal and woe - Wor. 378 

— the besieged Ardea all impost - - Sha. 1011 

— the brightest stars or from the viewless - Hem. 212 

— the brown crest of Newark - Scott 398 

— the close-shut windows gleams - Low. 4 

— the dark chambers of dejection freed - Wor. 234 

— the eyrie of your eagle thought - - - Wil. 98 

— the fierce aspect of this river - - - Wor. 295 

— the first circle I descended thus - - Dante 15 

— the forests and highlands - She. 425 

— the French ------ Moore 646 

— the glowing southern regions - - - Hem. 248 

— the heart of Waumbek Methna - - - Whi. 202 

— the hills of home forth looking - - Whi. 221 

— the last hill that looks on thy once holy - Byron 195 

— the outskirts of the town - Lon. 229 

— the pier's head, musing ----- Wor. 306 



1 QQ From 

From the pure depths of her humanity! - Wor. 460 

— the river Euphrates, the river whose • - Mer. 162 

— the round at the top he has stepped - Wil. 234 

— the well-springs of Hudson - Whi. 254 

— thee, Eliza, I must go --•'_. Burns 200 

— these wild rocks I look to-day - . - Whi. 356 

— thine eden of the sea Flo. 286 

— this deep chasm ------ Wor. 330 

— this fair point of present bliss - - - Pro. 193 

— this high portal, where upsprings - - Lon. 390 

— thorny wilds a monster came - - - Cow. 629 

— those eternal regions bright - Tho. 472 

— those drear solitudes and frowsy cells - Burns 141 

— thy Pomeranian throne - • - Scott 319 

— thy worth and weight . . - Erne. 249 

— vulgar bounds with brave disorder - - Pope 44 

— women's eyes this doctrine I derive - Sha. 149 

— Yorktown s ruins, ranked and still - - Whi. 70 

— you have I been absent in the spring - Sha, 1040 
Frosch, c. in Faust - - - "- - -Faust 22 
Frost at midnight ------ Col. 182 

— spirit, The - Whi. 91 

Froth, c. in Measure for Measure - - - Sha, 67 

Frowns are on everv muse's face - - - Wor. 150 

Fruit-gift, The ------- Whi. 198 

Fruitful of good life's gentle charities - - Arn. 158 

Fuchsia, Poesy of the - - - - - Flo. 169 

Fudge family in Paris - Moore 483 

Fugitive slave act, On the - - - Whi. 198 

— slaves, Capture of - - - - - - Low. 82 

— The - Lon. 336 ; Mer. 271 ; Sch. 44 

— The -------- She. 437 

Fulconem Grevilium, Letter to - - - Her. 498 

Fulfiller, The - - - - - - P. of F. 140 

Full bravely hast thou fleshed thy maiden sword Sha. 408 

— but not satisfied - Wes. 279 

— fathom five thy father lies - - - Sha. 5 

— knee-deep lies the winter snow - - - Ten. 54 

— little knowest thou that hast not - - Spe. 608 

— many a bard hath sung the solemn - - Scott 324 

— many a gem of purest ray serene - - Fav. 32 

— many a glorious morning have I seen - Sha. 1032 

— many in the world we find - - - Sch. 245 

— merrily the humble-bee doth sing - - Sha. 653 

— o' the milk of human kindness - - - Sha. 791 

— of rebellion I would die Her. 127 

— of trembling expectation - Wes. 110 

— seven score years our city's pride - - Hoi. 311 

— soon doth sorrow make her covenant - Mer. 294 

— thirty frosts since thou wert young - - Cow. 39 



Full j QA 

General x °* 

Full twenty years and more, our laboring - Dry. 501 

Fullarton, Col. , Letter to - - - - Burns 471 

Fum and hum the two birds of royalty - Moore 612 

Funeral, A ------- Rog. 106 

— genius, The ------- Hem, 316 

— hymn. (Ivanhoe.) ----- Scott 423 

— hymn, A - - - - - Wes. 141 

— phantasy - Sch. 20 

— service -------- "Wor. 378 

— tree of the Sokokis - - - Whi. 31 
Furl we the sails, and pass with tardy - Wor. 364 
Furness abbey, At - - - - "Wor. 251 
Furth goth all the courte -.-'-.. Flo. 55 

Fuseli, H., Ode to White 319 

Future, Past and Bro. 82 

— peace of the church ----- Cow. 58 

— The - Bry. 183 

— To the - - - Low. 65 

Futurity — a sonnet ------ Bro. 84 

Fy, gae rub her o'er wi' straw - - - Burns 298 

— let us a' to Kirkcudbright - Burns 280 

G. B. C, To- - - - - - - - Whi. 248 

G. L. S. - - - - - - - - Whi. 338 

G. ; M. S., To Byron 135, 141 

G; W. L., To - - - - - - - Whi. 47 

Gaberlunzie man, The," Remark on - Burns 328 

Gabriel, c. in Scenes from Faust - - - She. 546 

Gaddi me fece, il Ponte Vecchio, sono - - Lon. 368 

Gadshill, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - - - Sha. 382 

Gain is a groveling care and folly tires - Wil. 200 

'Gainst the tooth of time ----- Sha. 87 

Gala Water — a song Burns 250 

Galatians, On passage in epistle to - - - Wes. 2 

Galaxy, The — a sonnet Lon. 366 

Galbraith, Victor ------ Lon. 218 

Galene frustra es, cur miserum premens - Her. 540 

Gallant weaver, The ----- Burns 241 

Galloway, lord, Epigrams on - Burns 182 

— Tarn," Remarks on - Burns 336 
Gallows, Abolition of the - - - - Whi. 100 
Gallus— a pastoral ----- Virgil 49 

— friend of Caesar, c. in Antony and Cleop. Sha. 911 
Game of flowers ------- Flo. 222 

Gamel, c. in Harold - Ten. 615 

Gamely n, Cokes tale of Cha. 127 

Gane is the day, and mirk's the night - - Burns 228 

Ganges, Romance of the Bro. 44 

Ganymede— an ode - - - - - - Goe. 179 

Garcias, c. in Siege of Valencia - - - - Hem. 434 



1CK Full 

10 ^ General 

Garcilasso, Sonnet from ----- Flo. 145 

Garden and the rock - - - - - P. of F. 119 

— girls— a song _.__-- Faust 184 

— shed, Inscription for a - - - - Cow. 497 

— The. (Andrew Mar veil.) - Flo. 422 

— The. Imitation of Cowley - Pope 444 

— The. (The Task.) ----- Cow. 284 
Gardener's daughter, The ----- Ten. 65 
Gardiner, bishop, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 

— Stephen, bishop, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 
Gareth and Lynette - Ten. 492 
Garfield, President ------ Lon. 408 

Gargrave, Sir Thomas, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 

Garibaldi, Giuseppe - - - Bro. 614; Whi. 350 

Garland, The. (Moore.) - Flo. 144 

Garlands, The — an antique - - . Goe. 272 

— upon his grave ------ Lon. 358 

Garnet, c. in Good-natured Man - - - Gol. 178 

Garrison, William Lloyd - Low. 103 

— of Cape Ann ------- Whi. 221 

Gar's auld claes look amaist as weel's the new Burns 51 

Garvin, Mary - - Whi. 202 

Garzia, Don - Eog. 80 

Gaspar Becerra - Lon. 132 

Gat ye me, oh, gat ye me - Burns 275 

Gather him to his grave again - Bry. 106 

— oh, gather - - She. 575 

— ye rosebuds. (Herrick.) - Flo. 107 

— your roses ------- Flo. 104 

Gatherer, The - - - - - - P. of F. 167 

Gathering, The. (Lady of the Lake.) - - Scott 127 

Gaudy, blabbing and remorseful day - - Sha. 515 

Gaunt, John of, c. in Richard ii. - - - Sha. 356 
Gautama. See Buddha. 

Gave his body to that pleasant country's earth Sha. 347 

Gay, John, Epitaph on Pope 347 

— John. The narcissus - - - - - Flo. 51 

Fables of, translated ----- Cow. 647 

To - - - - - - - Pope 369, 398 

— lilies on the virgin breast - Flo. 163 
Gayly bedight a gallant knight - - - Poe 98 

— sounds the castanet - - - - - Moore 527 

Gazel - Moore 313 

Geddes, bishop Alex., Letter to - Burns 428 

Gem of the crimson-colored even - - - Cam. 219 

Gemappe, Epigram on defeat at - - - Burns 181 

Gemelle cultu simplici gaudens liber - - Mil. 559 

Gemina Academia, De Her. 562 

General confession — a song ---'.- Goe. 89 

— of French forces in Bordeaux - - - Sha. 469 



generosity 186 

Generosity and justice — an essay - - - Gol. 397 

Generous, gay and gallant nation - - - Pope 374 

Genesis, On passages in book of - - Wes. 183, 231 

Geneva, Lake of ----- - Eog. 11 

Genevieve — a sonnet - Col. 34 

Genevra, Sonnet to - - - - - - Byron 254 

Genial impulse — an epigram - Goe. 222 

Genius - Sch. 239 

— anode - - - - - - White 338 

— and criticism - Moore 607 

— in beauty — a sonnet - Eos. 235 

— of harmony ------- Moore 129 

— of love, The— an essay ----- Gol. 502 

— of musings, who, the midnight hour - White 380 

— of Raphael, of thy wings - Wor. 209 

— of romance, Ode to the -'-'.-'- White 330 

— thou gift of heaven, thou light divine - - Cra. 104 

— To his - - - - - - - - She. 466 

— with inverted torch ----- gch. 260 
Genoa, Italy - - - - - - Rog. 166 

— Night-scene in - - - - - - - Hem. 114 

Gentian, fringed, To the - - - Bry. 128; Flo. 274 

Gentle and lovely form - - - - Hem. 234 

— and modest hero ! ----- WH. 309 

— crook ! oh, that I never ----- Sch. 348 

— dullness ever loves a joke - Pope 136 

— Jesus meek and mild ... Wes. 103 

— spring, in sunshine clad - Lon. 19 

— swain, The," Remarks on - - - Burns 302 

— youth ! whose looks assume - - - Moore 56 
Gentleman, Epigram to an offended - Burns 181 

— farmer, The - - - - - - - Cra. 23 

— is not in your books ----- gha. Ill 

Gentleness— a ballad Cha. 602 

Gently, most gently, on thy victim's head - Whi. 348 

George III. , Death of — a sonnet - - - Wor. 242 

— duke of Clarence, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 Sha. 526 

— brother of Edward IV., c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 556 

— earl Delawarr, To Byron 174 

— of Aspen, c. in House of Aspen - - - Scott 562 
Georgetown house of worship, For - - Whi. 340 

Georgiana, Ode to - Col. 195 

Georgics. (Dry den.) Vir. 52 

German, Ballads from the - Scott 355 

— comedy Sch. 265 

— faith- - Sch. 224 

— genius Sch. 263 

— muse - - Sch. 221 

— ocean, Icebergs in the - Cow. 506 

— Parnassus Goe. 183 



-| on Generosity 

Germans, Ode to the - •• Cam. 266 

— on heights of Hockheim - Wor. 284 
Germany and her princes - Sch. 264 

— Written in ------ - Wor. 415 

Gersa, prince of Hungary, c. in Otho the Great Keats 333 

Gertrude, niece of Isabella, c. in House of Aspen Scott 562 

— of Wyoming ------ Cam. 75 

— or fidelity till death - -Hem. 166 

— queen of Denmark, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 
Get place and wealth, if possible, with grace - Pope 290 

— thee behind me. Even as - - - - Eos. 271 

— up, get up, for shame, the blooming - - Flo. 455 

— ye up from the wrath of God ? s terrible - Whi. 86 
Gethsemane, Scenes in - - - - - Wil. 61 
Gettysburg, Hive at ----- Whi. 333 
Ghost of Banquo, c. in Macbeth - - - Sha. 788 

— of Hamlet's father, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 

— of Miltiades, The ----- Moore 639 

— seer, The - - Low. 84 

— story, A ------- - Mer. 267 

Ghosts of the dead, have I not - - - She. 557 

— The - - - - - - - - - Lon. 183 

Giacomo, son of Francesco, c. in The Cenci She. 268 

Giaour, The ------- Byron 1 

Giborne, Maria, Letter to She. 341 

Giddiness -------- Her. 216 

Giddings, Joshua E., Sonnet to - - - Low. 25 

Giftord, c. in Auchindrake - Scott 493 

Gift from the cold and silent past ! - - Whi. 27 

— of the hero, on his dying day - - Moore 597 

— of Tritemius, The ----- Whi. 235 

— On receiving a — a sonnet - Hood 166 
Gift, The. (Herbert.) - - - Fav. 406; Gol. 127 
Gil Morice," Eemarks on - - - - Burns 326 

Gilbert, Sir Humphrey Lon. 127 

Gilderoy - Cam. 198 

Gilfillan, Eobert. Exile's song - - - Fav. 342 

Gilliflower, Evening (anon.) - Flo. 483 

— The. (Drayton.) ----- Flo. 168 
Gilman, Mrs. Mountain church - - - Fav. 257 
Gilpin, John, History of - Cow. 240 
Gin ye meet a bonny lassie - - - Burns 298 

Ginevra Eog. 69; She. 472 

Giorgio Vasari, c. in Michelangelo - - - Lon. 445 

Giotto's tower Lon. 321 

Giovane piano, e semplicetto amante - - Mil. 473 

Girl leading a blind mother - - - - Wil. 303 

Girt in dark growth, yet glimmering - - Eos. 246 

— round with rugged mountains - - - Pro. 115 
Give --------- Pro. 107 



gj> ve 188 

Give all to love ------ Erne. 84 

— dreadful note of preparation - - - Sha. 454 

— honor unto Luke Evangelist - - - Ros. 157, 263 

— it an understanding, but no tongue - - Sha. 815 

— lettered pomp to teeth of time - - - Whi. 187 

— me a cottage — a sonnet - White 312 

— me again my hollow tree - Pope 514 

— me an ounce of civet ----- Sha. 871 

— me another horse Sha. 589 

— me, indulgent fate ----- Flo. 390 

— me only a fragment of earth - - - Sch. 264 

— me that enlarged desire - - - - Wes. 284 

— me the harp of epic song - - - Moore 22 

— me the ocular proof Sha. 896 

— me thy heart ------- Pro. 92 

— me to drink mandragora - Sha. 915 

— me truths, for I am weary - - - - Erne. 122 

— more than thou takest - - - - P. of F. 90 

— place -' Pro. 243 

— sorrow words, the grief that does not speak Sha. 805 

— the devil his due - - - - - - Sha. 384 

— the world assurance of a man - - - Sha. 832 

— thy thoughts no tongue - - Sha. 815 

— thy worst of thoughts - Sha. 894 

— to barrows, trays and pans - - - - Erne. 235 

— us a taste of your quality - - - - Sha. 824 

— us our daily bread ------ Pro. 384 

— you a reason on compulsion - Sha. 392 
Giver of all that crowns our days - - - Hoi. 253 

— of glowing light ------ Hood 146 

Gives to airy nothing a local habitation - - Sha. 176 

Giving and taking - - - - - - Whi. 415 

— in marriage. (Jean Ingelow.) - - - Fav. 378 

— thy sum of more to that which had - - Sha. 210 
Glad sight wherever new with old - - - Wor. 151 

— tidings — a sonnet ----- Wor. 357 

Gladness of nature ------ Bry. 105 

Gladys and her island ----- Ing. 366 

Glance behind the curtain ----- Low. 49 

— The ------- Her. 273 

Glansdale, Sir William, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 

Glaucus and Diomed, Episodes of - - - Iliad 154 

Gleam of sunshine ------ Lon. 78 

Gleaner, The ------- Wor. 452 

Gleaning song Ing. 436 

Glee for king Charles Scott 454 

Glen-Almain, or the narrow glen - - - Wor. 256 

— of loch Etive, Composed in — a sonnet - Wor. 384 

Glenara - Cam. 152 

Glencairn, earl of, Lament for - - - Burns 135 



189 



Give 
Go 



Glencairn, earl of, Letters to - - Burns 367, 390, 498 

— lady, Letter to ----- - Burns 491 

Glencoe, Massacre of - - - - - - Seott 385 

— Pilgrim of - Cam. 280 

— Widow of - - Ayt. 87 

Glendenning, Edward, To - Scott 427 

Glendower, Owen, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - Sha. 382 

Glenfinlas, or lord Eonald's coronach - - Scott 342 

Glenmary, Eeverie at - Wil. 94 

Glide gently, thus forever glide - - - Wor. 21 

Glimpse, The - - Her. 253 

Glitter like a swarm of fireflies - - - Ten. 89 

Globe tavern, Epigrams on dining at - Burns 181 

— tavern, On a window at - - - - Burns 183 
Gloom is upon thy lonely hearth - - - Hem. 235 
Gloomy and black are the cypress-trees - Pro. 175 

— and dark art thou, O chief of the mighty - Lon. 85 

— December — a song ----- Burns 232 
Glory and loveliness have passed away - - Keats 229 

— and thanks and praise - Wes. 151 

— of warrior, glory of orator - - - - Ten. 443 

— to God alone. (Mme. Guyon.) - - - Cow. 628 

— to God and praise and love - Wes. 8 

— to God and to the power - Wor. 381 
Glossary to Biglow papers - • - Low. 296 

— to Chaucer's poems Cha. 605 

— to poems of Spenser - Spe. 705 

— to works of Shakespeare - Sha. 1055 
Gloucester, Duchess of, c. in Eichard ii. - - Sha. 356 
(Eleanor) c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 - - Sha. 496 

— Duke of, c. in Henry v. - - - - - Sha. 439 

uncle to king, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - Sha. 469 

(Eichard III.) c. in Eichard iii - - Sha. 556 

— Earl of, c. in King Lear - Sha. 847 

— Humphrey, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - - Sha. 409 
Glove, The ------- Sch. 183 

Glowing with love, on fire for fame - - Scott 397 

Glumdalclitch, Lamentation of - Pope 392 

Glycine, dtr. of Chef Eagozzi, c. in Zapolya - Col. 250 

Gnat, To the - - - - - - - Eog. 340 

Go back to antique ages of thine eyes - - Wor. 277 

— fair example of untainted youth - - Pope 345 

— faithful portrait ! and where long - - Wor. 247 

— fetch to me a pint o' wine - Burns 214 

— forth ! for she is gone ----- Hem. 124 

— forth, my song, upon thy venturous way Scott 303 

— forth to the mount ----- Moore 352 

— forth under the open sky and list - - Bry. 21 

— from me. Yet I feel that I shall - - - Bro. 153 

— heavenly guest, ethereal messenger - - Mil. 191 



Goethe 190 

Go if thou wilt, ambrosial flower - - - Erne. 294 

— leave me, priest, my soul would be - - Low. 76 

— let me weep ! ----- Moore 343 

— little book, and find our friend - - - Tho. 450 

— lovely rose. (Waller.) - - Flo. 353; White 359 

— not, happy day, from the shining - - Ten. 229 

— now, and dream o'er that joy - - Moore 533 

— obedient to my call ----- Goe. 91 

— said the angry, weeping maid - - Moore 178 

— seek thine earth-born sisters - - - Hoi. 185 

— sit old Cheviot's crest below - Scott 460 

— then, if she whose shade thou art - - Moore 162 

— then — 'tis vain - - - - % - Moore 529 

— thou art all unfit to share - Cow. 469 

— thou to thy learned task ------ Erne. 239 

— to the forest shade - - - - - Hem. 430 

— to the raging sea and say - White 332 

— to your peaceful rest ----- Flo. 272 

— to your prisons, though the air of spring Moore 319 

— Valentine, and tell that lovely maid - Flo. 464 

— where glory waits thee - - - - Moore 213 

— where he may, he cannot hope to find - Eog. 187 

— where the waves run rather Holborn-hilly Hood 605 

— whisper to the gentle one - Flo. 508 

— you may call it madness, folly - - - Eog. 251 
G-obbo, Old, father of Launcelot, c. in M. of Ven. Sha. 181 
Goblet, Inscription on a - - - - Burns 184 

— of life - - Lon. 39 

— The- - - - - - -Goe. 198; Fav. 218 

God and the bayadere— a legend - - - Goe. 140 

— be with thee, gladsome ocean - Col. 167 

— be with thee, my beloved - Bro. 69 

— bless New Hampshire, from her granite Whi. 59 

— bless our father's land - -. - Hoi. 152; Fav. 271 

— bless the little feet that never go astray - Fav. 90 

— bless ye, brothers— in the fight - - - Whi. 97 

— called the nearest angels who dwell - Whi. 411 

— Child's thought of - - - - - - Bro. 69 

— do not let my loved one die - - Low. 15 

— gave a gift to earth - - - - Pro. 73 

— gave to mortals birth ----- Goe. 262 

— give thee patience to endure all day - P. of F. 174 

— gives his mercies to be spent - - - Cow'. 56 

— had sifted three kingdoms to find - - Lon. 200 

— has given you one face - Sha. 826 

— help thee, traveler, on thy journey far White 313 

— hides his people. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. 632 

— in the great assembly stands - - - Mil. 495 

— is enough ! thou, who in hope - - - P. of F. 170 

— is in all that liberates and lifts - - - Low. 398 



1 Q1 Go 

iyi Goethe 

God is of the East possessed - Goe. 363 

— made him and therefore -.-.->:■- gha. 183 

— made the country, and man made - - Cow. 264 

— makes sech nights all white - Low. 229 

— might have made the earth bring - - Flo. 495 

— moves in a mysterious way -.-.-'-■ Cow. 96 

— neither known nor loved. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 616 

— of all good gifts the donor - Wes. 33 

— of fond desire, To the ----- Tho. 461 

— of my life, how good, how wise - Wes. 46 

— of my life, to thee I call - Cow. 76 

— of my life, whose gracious power - - Wes. 348 

— of unbounded power Wes. 71 

— only wise, almighty, good - - - - Wes. 116 

— prosper, speed, and save - She. 415 

— protect brave Alexander - Scott 402 

— save the flag! Hoi. 252 

— save the queen ! - She. 415 

— sends his teachers unto every age - - Low. 46 

— sent his singers upon earth - Lon. 134 

— soul and world - Goe. 256 

— stay thee in thine agony - Wil. 10 

— the creator, with pulseless hand - - Bro. 77 

— the eternal, infinite, all-wise - - Byron 105 

— To. (AdDeum.) - Her. 580 

— to his untaught children sent - Goe. 235 

— who didst so dearly buy - Wes. 303 

— who with thunders and great voices - Bro. 92 

— will roll up when this world's end - P. of F. 75 

— would not let the spheric lights - - Bro. 93 
Goddess of beauty, thee I hymn - - - Mer. 325 

— of woods, tremendous in the chase - - Pope 401 
Godfathers of heaven's lights - Sha. 136 

Godiva Ten. 94 

Godlike, The— an ode Goe. 181 

Godminster chimes Low. 341 

God's-acre Lon. 37 

— gift Pro. 73 

— love and peace be with thee - - - - Whi. 163 

— name in heaven - - - - - P. of F. 22 

— of Greece Sch. 82 

— of Hellas, can ye listen - Bro. 104 

— power, Hymn to - Tho. 445 

— will and free-will - P. of F. 66 

— world is bathed in beauty - Pro. 232 
Godwin, Fanny, Lines on She. 409 

— Mary Wollstonecraft, To She. 451 
GOETHE, JOHANN W. Von, Poems of: 

Absence, Bliss of— a song . . 40 I After-sensations— a song . . 44 

Admonition— an epigram . . 220 | Age, The. (Her. and Dor., vi.) . 327 



Goethe 



192 



Album, From an . . . .306 
Alexis and Dora— an elegy . . 283 
Anacreon's Grave— an antique . 268 
Anniversary Song .... 80 
Answers in a Game— a song . 32 

Antiques 268 

Apparent Death .... 43 
April— a song . . . . .69 
Archangel's Song . . .391 
Art-Drops of Nectar . . .247 
As Broad as it's Long . . . 223 
Asan Aga, Wife of— a ballad . 147 
At Midnight Horn'— a song . 72 
Authors— a parable . . . 230 
Autumn Feelings— a song . . 54 

Ballads 100 

Banished and Returning Count 102 
Bayadere, God and the— a ballad 140 
Beauteous Flower— a ballad . 110 
Beautiful Night, The— a song . 38 
Beauty, Conflict of Wit and . 241 
Before a Court of Justice— a ballad 118 
Behrisch, Odes to 160 

Belinda, To 49 

Bequest of the Persian Faith . 383 
Best, The— an epigram . . . 223 
Blind-man's Buff— a song . . 23 
Bliss of Absence— a song . . 40 

— of Sorrow — a song ... 61 
Boundaries of Humanity— an ode 179 
Brethren, The— an antique . 269 
Bride of Corinth— a ballad . . 135 
Bridegroom, The ... 73 
Burghers, The. (Her. and Dor., iii.) 306 

Burial 239 

Buyers, The 240 

By the River ... 46, 237 
Calm at Sea— an epigram . . 224 
Cantatas, Three . . . .150 
Cat-pie— a parable .... 229 
Celebrity— a satire . . . 233 
Charade— a sonnet . . . .221 
Charlotte, To . . . . 192 
Chorus of Angels. (Faust.) . . 392 

— of Spirits .... 333, 398 
Chosen Cliff — an antique . . 270 

— One. To the— a song . . 43 
Christel— a song .... 23 
Christmas-box, The— a sonnet . 219 
Christ's descent into Hell . . 263 
Chuld Nameh. (Divan, xii.) . 385 
Comfort in Tears— a song . . 56 
Conflict of Wit and Beauty . 241 
Consecrated Spot,The— an antique 270 
Constancy in Change— a song . 86 
Convert, The— a song ... 25 

Coptic Songs 90 

Corinth, Bride of . . . . 135 
Cosmopolite, The. (H. and D., v.) 319 
Country Schoolmaster . . 243 
Courage— an epigram . . . 225 
Coy One, The— a song . . 24 

— One, To the— a song . . .65 
Crane, Fox and . . . .237 
Critic, The— a parable . . . 239 
Curts' Wedding Journey . . 112 
Dance of Death— a ballad . . 131 
Death, Apparent .... 43 

— lament of wife of Asan Aga . 147 

— of the Fly . . . .236 
Declaration of War— a song . . 29 

13 



Dedication 17 

— of Faust 390 

Departure — a sonnet . . .216 
Descent into Hell . . . . 263 
Destruction of Madgeburg — a song 77 
Different emotions on the same spot 33 

— threats— a song . . . 35 
Dilettante and the Critic . . 231 
Discord. (Divan.) . . .364 
Distant One, To the— a song . 46 

Distichs 273 

Divan, On the 208 

— West-Eastern . . . .362 
Dorothea. (H. and D., vii.) . . 33 J 
Doubters and the Lovers — a sonnet 220 
Dove, Eagle and the— an ode . 176 
Drops of Nectar . . . . 247 
Eagle and the Dove— an ode . 176 
Effects at a Distance— a ballad 128 
Egmont, Song from . . . 406 
Elegies, Roman .... 279 
Epigrams . . . 222, 256, 262, 275 
Epilogue to Schiller's "Song of 

the Bell" . . . .403 
Epiphanias — a song ... 99 
Epitaph: As a boy. reserved and 

naughty .... 226 
Epithalamium . . . .113 
Epochs, The— a sonnet . . 220 
Ergo Bibamus— a song . . .98 
Erl-King, The— a ballad . . 106 
Ever and Everywhere— a song . 64 
Exchange, The— a song . . 47 
Excuse— an antique . . .271 
Explanation of an antique gem 228 
Faithless boy, The— a ballad . 105 
Farewell Song . . . .46 

— The— a song .... 33 
Fate and Sympathy. (H. and 

Dor., i.) .... 289 
Fates, Song of the . . . . 404 
Father Kronos, To— an ode . 171 
Faust, Dedication to . .390 

Favored Beasts, The. (Divan.) 386 
Fellowship Song .... 85 

Finnish Song 75 

First Loss— a song ... 44 
First Walpurgis-night— a cantata 157 
Fisherman, The— a ballad . . 108 
Five Things. (Divan.) . . .367 
Flower-salute .... 52 
Fly, Death of the . . . . 238 
Food in Travel— a sonnet . . 216 
Fool's Epilogue, The . . .227 

For Ever 206 

Fortune of War— a song . . 93 
Found— a song .... 27 
Four Favors, The . . . .363 
Fox and Crane . . . .237 

— and Huntsman .... 238 
Freebooter, The— a song . . 67 
Friendly Meeting— a sonnet . . 214 

Frogs, The 238 

Ganymede— an ode . . . 179 
Garlands, The— an antique . 272 
General Confession— a song . . 89 
Genial Impulse— an epigram . 222 
German Parnassus, The . . 183 
Goblet, The . . . . .198 
God and the Bayadere— a legend 140 

— Soul and the World . . 256 



193 



Goethe 



Godlike, The— an ode . . .181 
Golden Heart, To a— a song . 61 

— Necklace, With a— a song . 51 
Goldsmith's apprentice— a song 31 
Gotz von Berlichingen . . . 405 
Grasshopper, To the . . .199 
Growth— a sonnet . . . .215 

Gypsy Song 76 

Hans Nameh. (Divan., ii.) . . 365 

— To. (Divan.) .... 365 
Hans Sachs' poetical mission . 209 
Happiness and Vision . . 39 
Happy Couple, The— a song . 82 
Hartz Mountains, Journey over 168 
Heath-rose, The— a song . . 22 
Hermann. (Her. and Dor., ii.). 296 

— and Dorothea .... 289 
Hikmet Nameh. (Divan, vi.) . 368 
Human Feelings .... 208 
Hunter's Evening Song . . 62 
Husbandman, To the— an antique 268 
I once into a forest far . . 35 
Idyl for Duchess of Weimar . 150 
Imprisoned Count, Song of the 110 
In a Word— a sonnet . . . 214 

— Summer— a song . . . 52 
Instructors, The— an antique . 270 
Iphigenia in Tauris, From . . 404 
It is Good. (Divan.) . . .382 
Johanna Sebus— a ballad . . 107 
Joy— a parable .... 228 

— and Sorrow— a song . . .68 
June— a song .... 70 
King of Thule— a ballad . . 109 
Legend— a parable . . . 230 

— of the Horseshoe . . . 245 

L'Envoi 412 

Leopold, duke of Brunswick 268 

Lida, To— a song . . . .65 
Like and Like— a song . . 27 
Lily's Menagerie . . . .188 
Lina, To— a song .... 64 
List of his Works with dates . .16 
Living Remembrance— a song . 39 
Longing— a song . . .57 

Love as a Landscape painter . 253 
Lover in all shapes— a song . . 30 
Love's distresses .... 193 
Loving One, once more— a sonnet 217 

— One speaks .... 374 

— One writes 217 

Luna, To 41 

Madgeburg, Destruction of —a song 77 
Magic Net, The . . . .197 

— Pupil in— a ballad . . . 132 
Mahomet'^ Song— an ode . . 163 
Maid of the Mill's Treachery . 121 

— of the Mill's Repentance . 123 
Maiden speaks, The— a sonnet . 215 

— Wishes— a song ... 36 
March— a song . . . .68 
Margaret at her spinning-wheel 394 
Mathal Nameh. (Divan, x.) . . 381 
May— a song .... 69 

May Song: 49, 53 

Measure of Time — an antique . 269 
Metamorphosis of plants . . 257 
Mignon— a ballad . . . 10f 

— To— a song 5> 

Minstrel, The— a ballad . . 100 
Misanthrope, The— a song . . 3«j 

13 



Mischievous Joy— a song . . 42 
Monarchs, Rules for— an epigram 226 
Moon, Song to the 63 

Morganni Nameh. (Divan, i.) . 303 
Morning Lament . . .194 
Mother and Son. (H. and Dor., iv.) 310 
Motives— a song .... 36 
Mountain Castle, The — a song . 59 

— From the— a song ... 52 

— Village, The . . . .240 
Musagetes, The .... 193 
Muse's Mirror, The— an antique . 2?1 

— Son, The— a song ... 26 
My Goddess— an ode . . .167 

— only Property— an epigram . 225 
Neither this, nor that— an epigram 223 
Nemesis— a sonnet . . . 218 
New Amadis, The — a song . . 21 

— Amor, The— an antique . . 272 

— Love, New Life— a song . . 48 

— Year, On the — a song . . 79 
Next Year's Spring— a song . . 71 

Night song 57 

Night Thoughts— a song . . 65 
No one talks more than a poet— a 

song 20 

November Song .... 43 
Odes to Behrisch .... 160 
On the Lake— a song . . .51 
One Pair More. (Divan. ) . .366 
Open Table— a song . . .94 
Originals, To— an epigram . 222 
Page and Miller's Daughter . .118 
Parable— I picked a rustic nosegay 235 

Parables 228 

Pariah's Prayer, The— a ballad 142 
Parnassus, German . . . 183 
Parsi Nameh. (Divan, xi.) . 383 
Paul's Post futuri— an epigram . 226 
Pearl, Origin of the . . .381 
Persian poem— The Divan . . 362 
Petition— a song .... 04 
Phoebus and Hermes— an antique 272 
Plan the Muses entertained . 236 
Plants, Metamorphosis of . . 257 
Playing at Priests ... 233 
Poetry— a parable . . . .235 
Premature Spring ... 53 
Presence— a song . . . .45 
Preservation— a song ... 25 
Privileged Men, The. (Divan.) . 385 
Prologue in Heaven. (Faust.) . 391 
Prometheus— an ode . . . 177 

Procemion 257 

Prosperous Voyage— an epigram 225 

Proverbs 261 

Proximity— a song .... 60 

— of the Beloved One ... 45 
Pupil in Magic— a ballad . . 132 
Rain and Rainbow . . . 242 
Rat-catcher, The— a ballad . . 116 
Reciprocal— a song ... 66 

— Invitation to Dance — a song . 28 
Reckoning, The— a song . . 96 
Religion and Church . . . 263 
Remembrance of the Good . 205 
Rendsch Nameh. (Divan, v.) . 368 
Restless Love— a song , . 55 
Reunion. The. (Divan.). . .378 
Ihymed Distichs .... 256 
.iinaldo- a cantata ... 153 



Goethe 
Goldsmith 



194 



Rising Full Moon, To the . . 72 
Rollicking Hans— a song . . 66 
Roman Elegies .... 279 

Royal Prayer 208 

Rule of Life, The— an epigram 223 
Rules for Monarchs— an epigram 326 
Sachs' Poetical Mission . . 209 
Saki Nameh. (Divan, ix.) . . 380 
Sakontala— an antique . . 271 
Schiller's Skull, On seeing . .207 
— " Song of the Bell," Epilogue to 409 
Sea-voyage. The— an ode . . 175 
Sebus, Johanna— a ballad . . 107 
Self-deceit— a song .... 28 
Seven Sleepers, The. (Divan.) . 387 
She cannot end— a sonnet . . 218 
Shepherd's Lament— a song . 55 
Should e'er the loveless day . . 236 
Sicilian Song .... 74 
Soldier's Consolation— an epigram 222 
Solitude— an antique . . . 269 
Song and Structure . . .364 
Songs are like painted window 



panes 

— from Plays 
Sonnets: Charade . 

— Christmas-box . 

— Departure . 

— Doubters and Lovers « 

— Epochs, The 

— Food in travel . 

— Friendly Meeting. Th<* 

— Growth . 

— In a Word . 

— Loving One once more . 

— Loving One writes 

— Maiden Speaks, The 

— Nemesis 

— She cannot end 

— Warning, The 
Sorrow, Bliss of — a son ; 



Swiss Song .... 7b 

Symbol, A— " The Mason s trade ' ' 24b 

Svmbols 240 

Table song 87 

Talismans .... 

Tame Xenia 

Tefkir Nameh. (Divan, iv.) 

Threatening Signs . 

Three Palinodias . 

Thule. King of— a ballad 

Timur Nameh. (Divan, vii.) 

Traveler and Fair-maiden . 

Treasure-digger, The— a ballad 

Trilogy of Passion . 

True Enjoyment— a song . 

Types, The. (Divan.) . 

Unequal Marriage— an antique 

Unlimited, The. (Divan.) . 

Urania. (Herm. and Dor., ix.) 

Uschk Nameh. (Divan, iii.) . 

Valediction .... 

Valutas, Vanitstum, Vanitas 

Venetian Epigrams . 

Violet, The— a ballad . 

Visit, The .... 

Walking Bell, The— a ballad 

Walpurgis-Night, First— a cantata 157 

Wanderer. The ... 

Wanderer's Night-songs . 

— Storm-song .... 
War, Fortune of— a song . 
Warning— an antique . 

— The — a sonnet .... 
Way to Behave —an epigram 
Wedding. The .... 

— Night, The— a song . 

, — Song 

j Welcome and Farewell — a song 

West-Eastern. (Divan.) . 
When the Fox dies, his skin counts 21 
Who' 11 buy Gods, of Love— a song 34 
Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship, 

From 407 

i Winter and Timur . . 371 

| — Journey over Hartz Mountains 168 
; With a Painted Ribbon — a song . 50 
j Wont and Done— a song . . 88 
! Works, List of his . . . .16 
j Wrangler. The— a parable . . 232 
I Xenia— Erisrrams .... 262 
! Yelpers, The— a parable . . 238 
I Youth and Millstream — a ballad . 120 
| Zuleika. (Divan.) . . 376, 379 

— Karceh. (Divan, viii.) . . 372 



241 
109 
371 
126 
115 
200 
36 
3(36 
271 
365 
351 



91 
275 
104 
196 
129 



62 
172 



219 
223 
233 

41 
113 

47 
362 



ag 
Sorrows of Young Werther, From 200 
Sound, sweet song ... 20 
Spinner, The— a ballad . . .117 
Spirit-song, over the Waters . 165 
Spirit's Salute— a song . . .60 
Spring Oracle— a song . . 81 
— Premature . ... F3 

Stork's Vocation, The— a parable 232 
Sublime Type, The. (Divan.) . 376 
Such is he whopleasethme— a song 73 
Suleika. See Zuleika. 
Summer, In— a song ... 52 
Swiss Alps, The— an antique . 273 

Goethe, J. W. Yon. Captive and Flowers 

Haste not ! rest not ! - - - 

On a volume of 

List of works with dates - 

Little red rose -_-'-'.. 

Mignon aspiring to heaven 

To - 

Violet, The ------ 

Goetz, a general, c. in the Piccolomini 
Goffo, Matthew, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 
Going a-Maying. (Eliza Cook.) 



Flo. 516 

Fav. 423 

Erne. 313 

Goe. 16 

Flo. 349 

Fav. 204 

Sch. 282 

Flo. 43 

Col. 407 

Sha. 496 

Flo. 57 



195 



Goethe 
Goldsmith 



Going a-Maying. (John K. Ingram.) 

— back again ------- 

— to a new habitation, On 

Gold and iron are good 

— and silver fishes ----- 

— egg ; a dream fantasy - 

— fishes. (Hartley Coleridge.) 

Golden apple, The - 

— days - - - - - ■■ - 

— gate, The 

— haired Ally whose name is one - 

— heart, To a — a song ----- 

— hues of youth are fled - 

— lads and girls all must - 

— mile-stone, The - - - - . - 

— necklace, With a — a song - 

— supper, The ------ 

— wedding of Longwood - 

— wires may annoy us as much as steel bars 

— words - 

— year, The- ------ 

Goldfinch starved to death ---.-- 
GOLDSMITH, OLIVER, Poems of: 



- Flo. 56 
Mer. 269 

- Wes. 50 
Erne. 230 

- Wor. 449 
Low. 369 

- Flo. 382 
Ten. 478 

- Pro. 26Q 
Pro. 159 

- Ten. 685 
Goe. 61 

Moore 54 

Sha. 965 



220 
51 



- Lon 

Goe 

- Ten. 449 
Whi. 391 

- Mer. 31 
Pro. 198 

- Ten. 86 
Cow. 396 



Advantages to be derived from 
sending a judicious traveler 
into Asia .... 464 
Alcander and Septimius, Story of 391 
Asem, an Eastern tale . . . 449 
Author's Bed-chamber, An , 133 
Beau Tibbs, a character . . 423 
Beautiful Youth, On a . . 130 
Behavior, Rules for . . .421 
Bensley, Mr., Prologue spoken by 179 
Blaize, Mrs. Mary — an elegy . 135 
Bulkley, Mrs., Epilogue intended 

for 14? 

• Epilogues spoken by 144, 267, 364 

Captivity, The— an oratorio . 162 
Catley, Miss, Epilogue spoken by 144 
Characters: Croaker 

Good-natured Man 178 

— Croaker, Mrs. 

Good-natured Man 178 

— Diggory. She Stoops to Conquer 270 

— Dubardieu. Good-natured Man 178 

— Garnet. . " 178 

— Hardcastle 

She Stoops to Conquer 270 

— Hardcastle, Mrs. " 270 

— Hardcastle, Miss " 270 

— Hastings . . " 270 

— Honey wood, Mr. 

Good-natured Man 178 

— Honey wood, Sir Wm. " 178 

— Jarvis ..." 178 

— Leontine . . . " 178 

— Lofty ..." 178 

— Marlow, Sir Charles 

She Stoops to Conquer 270 

— Marlow, Young " 270 

— Neville, Miss " 270 



Characters: Olivia 

Good-natured Man 

— Richland, Miss " 

— Tony Lumpkin 

She Stoops to Conquer 

Clown's Reply 

Clubs described .... 
Death of a Mad Dog, Elegy on . 
Deserted Village, The 
Distresses of a Disabled Soldier . 
Double Transformation— a tale 
Dress, Leveling distinction of 
Education of Youth . 
Elegy on the death of a Mad Dog 
English Clergy and Popular 

Preachers .... 
Epilogue by J. Cradock 
Epitaphs: Parnell, Dr., On . 

— Purdon, Edward, On 
Essays: Advantages to be derived 

from sending a judicious 
traveler into Asia . 

— Alcander and Septimius 

— Asem, an Eastern tale 

— Beau Tibbs; a character 

— Description of Various Clubs . 

— Distresses of a Disabled Soldier 

— Dress, Leveling Distinction of 

— Education of Youth . 

— English Clergy and Popular 

Preachers .... 

— Folly of Learning Wisdom in 

Retirement .... 

— Frailty of Man, On the . 

— Friendship, On . 

— Generosity and Justice . 

— Genius of Love .... 

— Happiness of Temper . 



178 
178 

270 
137 
380 
128 
86 
507 
123 
443 
401 
128 

458 
366 
137 
137 



464 
371 
449 
423 
380 
507 
443 
401 

458 

520 
514 
516 
397 
502 
375 



Goldsmith 
Ciower 



196 



Increased love of life 
with age 

— Indigent Philosopher, Speech of 

— Irresolution of Youth . 

— Ladies' Passion for leveling dis- 

tinction of dress 

— Letters by a common council- 

man 

— Love and Friendship . 

— Mad Dogs, On . 

— Magazine in Miniature, Speci- 

men of 

— Policy of Concealing our wants 

— Quack Doctors, On . 

— Reverie at the Boar's Head Tav- 

ern 

— Rules for Behavior . 

— Rules for Raising the Devil 

— Russian Assembly, Rules to be 

observed at a , 

— Strolling Player, Adventures 

of a 

— Versatility of Popular Favor 
Folly of Learning Wisdom in Re- 
tirement .... 

Frailty of Man— an essay 
Friendship, Love and 

— On— an essay .... 
Generosity and Justice 

Genius of Love .... 

Gift, The 

Goldsmith, Oliver, Memoir of 

Good-natured Man,The— a comedy 

Happiness of Temper . 

Haunch of Venison— an epistle . 

Hermit, The— a ballad 

Increased love of life with age . 

Indigent Philosopher, Speech of an 

Irresolution of Youth 

Justice, Generosity and 

Ladies' passion for leveling dis- 
tinction in Dress 

Let schoolmasters puzzle their 
brain 



Letters by a Common Council- 
man 524 

Lewes, Lee, Epilogue spoken by 149 
Life, Love of, increased with age 440 
Logicians Refuted . . .129 
Love and Friendship . . .371 

— Genius of 502 

Mad Dog, Elegy on Death of a .128 

— Dogs, On 435 

Magazine in Miniature . . . 418 
Melnoth, C, on Death of Goldsmith 55 
Memoir of Goldsmith by Dr. Aiken 7 
Monody on Goldsmith. . . 58 

New Simile, A 131 

Parnell, Dr., Epitaph on . . 137 
Plays : Good-natured Man — a 

comedy 177 

— She Stoops to Conquer — a com- 

edy ...... 269 

Policy of Concealing our Wants 390 

Prologue, A 134 

Purdon, Edward, Epitaph on. . 137 
Quack Doctors, On 485 

Quebec, Taking of . .138 

Raising the Devil, Rules for . . 422 

Retaliation 114 

Reverie at the Boar's Head . . 469 
Rules for Behavior ... 421 

— for Raising the Devil . . . 422 
Russian Assembly, Rules to be 

observed at a . . . 500 
She Stoops to Conquer— a comedy 269 
"Sisters, The," Epilogue to . 142 

Sonnet, A 139 

Strolling Player, Adventures of a 489 
Taking of Quebec . . . .138 
Tears of Genius. (Melnoth.) . 55 
Three Jolly Pigeons— a song . 281 
Threnodia Augustalis . . 151 

Traveler, The 69 

Versatility of Popular Favor . 414 
Woman, On . 138 

Wotty, W., Lines on Goldsmith 64 
" Zobeide," Prologue to . .140 



Goldsmith, Oliver. Deserted village 

Memoir of - 

Village preacher 

Goldsmith's apprentice — a song 
Goldthread's song - 

Gondola, The 

Gondoline— a ballad 

Gone! ------ 

— are the glorious Greeks of old - 

— before us, O our brother 

— glimmering through the dream 

— gone from us ! and shall we see - 

— gone, —sold and gone - 

— hath the spring with all its flowers 

— is the long, long winter night - 

— to thy heavenly Father's rest 
Goneril, dtr. of Lear, c. in King Lear 
Gonzalo, a counselor, c. in Tempest 



Ten. 



- Fav. 25 

- Gol. 7 

- Fav. 159 

- Goe. 31 

- Scott 431 

- Rog. 51 

- White 295 
490; Whi. 139 

Bry. 120 

- Whi. 134 

- Byron 290 

- Low. 1 

- Whi. 56 

- Whi. 144 

Bry. 135 

- Whi. 74 

Sha. 847 

- Sha. 1 



m Goldsmith 

Gower 

Good and better (anon.) ----- Fav. 233 

— by! - - -Erne. 37 

— counsail ----- Cha. 597; Fav. 324 

— deeds - - - - - - - P. of F. 57 

— digestion wait on appetite - - - - Sha. 799 

— direction, A ------ - Hood 598 

— evening, Sir Priest, and so late - - Scott 424 

— Friday -------- Her. 120 

— luck lies in odd numbers - - - - Sha. 63 

— man, Epitaph on a Cow. 517 

— name in man and woman - - - - Sha. 894 

— names were to be bought - Sha. 384 

— natured man — a comedy - - - - Gol. 177 

— neighbor cowslip I have seen - - - Flo. 27 

— night -------- She. 434, 577 

— night ! and may all holy angels - - - Lon. 49 

— night! (Childe Harold.) - - - - Byron 280 

— night ! good-night ! and is it - - - Moore 73 

— night ! good-night ! as sweet repose - - Sha. 720 

— night ! good-night ! beloved - - - - Lon. 63 

— night in the porch ----- Mer. 397 

— night? no, love! the night is ill - - - She. 434 

— night ! parting is such sweet sorrow - Sha. 721 

— part, The - Lon. 42 

— people all, of every sort - Gol. 128 

— people all with one accord - - - Gol. 135 

— reader ! if you e'er have seen - - Moore 80 

— sense, which only is the gift of heaven - Pope 255 

— shepherd, The ------- Lon. 16 

— The - - - - - - - P. of F. 151 

— thing, to make it too common - - - Sha. 413 

— things will strive to dwell - - - - Sha. 6 

— time going, A Hoi. 169 

— wine needs no bush Sha. 228 

Goodness and greatness Sch. 2^>2 

Goody Blake and Harry Gill - - - - Wor. 456 

Goose, The Ten. 59 

Gordale — a sonnet - Wor. 240 

Gordon, a chief, c. in Halidon Hill - - - Scott 462 

Gorgona cur diram larvasque obtrudis - Her. 561 

Goslyn, Dr. John, To. (Milton.) - - - Cow. 572 

Gospel, Abuse of the ----- Cow. 91 

Gossip youll like to hear Sch. 315 

Gotz von Berlichingen ----- Goe. 405 

Goudie, John, Epistle to - Burns 155 

Gould, Hannah F. Aurora borealis - - Fav. 191 

Govern the lips as they were palace-doors - Arn. 158 

Governor W. W. Swain, To - - - - Hoi. 125 

Gowden locks of Anna:— a song - - Burns 270 

Gower, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - - - Sha. 409 



G-ower i qo 

Greatness xvo 

Gower, an officer, c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 

— as chorus, c. in Pericles -'---. Sha. 977 
Grace Darling - - - - - - - Wor. 460 

Grace - Erne. 299; Her. 143 

— after dinner Burns 188 

— after meat Wes. 82 

— and providence ..._-_ Cow. 94 

— beauty and caprice - - - - - Erne. 234 

— before dinner Burns 187 

— before meat Wes. 80 

— For one fallen from Wes. 312 

— (Peter Bell the Third.) - - -• - She. 310 

— triumphant in the throne - Cow. 93 
Graces, The, Inscription for temple to - - Rog. 249 
Gracie, James, Letter to - Burns 513 
Gracious Lord our children see - - - Cow. 68 

— moonlight — a sonnet - - - - - R:>s. 236 

— one, The - P. of F. 76 

Graf Dornberg, c. in Armgart - Eliot 36 

Graham, c. in Auchindrane - Scott 494 

— Robert, Epistles to - - - - Burns 169, 172, 174 

— Robert, Letters to Burns 412, 443, 484 

— Mrs. Robert, Letter to - - - - Burns 462 

— Mrs., of Fintry, To Burns 144 
Grahame, James. The seasons - - - Fav. 118 
Grahn, Dr., c. in Armgart - - - Eliot 55 
Gramachree," Remarks on Burns 307 
Grandmother, The. (Victor Hugo.) Ten. 378; Fav. 354 
Grandmother's mother, her age - - - Hoi. 243 

— story of Bunker-Hill battle - - - Hoi. 300 
Grandpre, a lord, c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 
Grant, Mrs. Sprig of heath - Flo. 173 

— Ulysses S., At dinner to, 1865 - - - Hoi. .261 

— at last, love's utmost measure - - I. S. S. 41 

— me indulgent heaven that I may live - Burns 183 

— me the muse, ye gods ----- Cow. 40 

— that by this unsparing hurricane - - Wor. 368 
Granta — a melody ----- Byron 139 

Granted is the Savior's prayer - - - Wes. 67 

Granville, Mr., To - - - - - - Dry. 283 

Grasmere, Composed at Wor. 493 

— Inscription at - - - - - - - Wor. 466 

— lake, Composed near - Wor. 277 
Grasshopper and cricket (anon.) - - - Flo. 375 

— On the - Cow. 519 ; Ten. 469 

— To the - - - - ■ - - - - Goe. 199 

Gratefulness - - - - - - Her. 211 

Gratiae de Fluvio contra redemptores - - Her. 508 

— de Scriptis - - - - - - - Her. 506 

Gratiano, c. in Merchant of Venice - - - Sha. 181 



1QQ Grower 

x ° ° Greatness 

Gratiano, brother of Brabantio, c. in Othello Sha. 879 

— speaks an infinite deal of nothing - - Sha. 182 
Gratitude- ------- Cow. 439 

— and love to God. (Mme. Guy on.) -Cow. 623 
Gratulatio ad Cranfield ----- Her. 513 

— ad Heath — a letter ------ Her. 505 

— ad F. Leigh - Her. 512 

— ad Mountag — a letter ----- Her. 504 

— de Marchionatu — a letter - Her. 500 
Grave at Greenwood. (J. A.) - - - - Flo. 302 

— by the lake ------- Whi. 299 

— diggers, characters in Hamlet - - - Sha. 811 

— Jonas Kindred, Sybil Kindred's sire - Cra. 59 

— me a cup with brilliant grace - - Moore 23 

— muses, march in triumph - Spe. 24 

— of a child- ------- Wil. 75 

— of a friend, Sonnet at - - - - - White 345 

— of a poetess ------- Hem. 199 

— of Mrs. Judson. (Miss M. Eemick.) - Fav. 268 

— The - - - - - - - - - Lon. 20 

Graves of a household - - - Hem. 426 ; Fav. 164 

— of martyrs ------ -Hem. 361 

— of two English soldiers - Low. 97 

— which true love had bathed with tears - Hem. 138 
Gravestone at Worcester cathedral - - Wor. 245 
Gravma, To Count - - - - - Cow. 504 
Gray, Edward - Ten. 107 

— Florence - - Wil. 256 

— Thomas. The elegy ----- Fav. 30 

— brother, The - ----- - Scott 352 

— chief, The ------- Hoi. 145 

— towers of Durham ! there was once - - Scott 320 
Gray's Elegy, the epitaph in Latin - - She. 554 
Great Caesar fell, O what a fall - - - Sha. 778 

— is our redeeming Lord - Wes. 219 

— Jove, to whose almighty throne - - Byron 134 

— men have been among us - - - - Wor. 272 

— Michelangelo, with age grown bleak - - Ros. 273 

— ones eat up the little ones - - - - Sha. 982 

— peace in Europe ! Order reigns - - - Whi. 161 

— saint Bernard ------ Rog. 15 

— Sir, having just had the good luck - Moore 627 

— soul, thou sittest with me in my room - Low. 20 

— spirit whom the sea of boundless - - - She. 508 

— sultan, how wise are thy state compositions Moore 638 

— truths are portions of the soul - - - Low. 20 

— wrong I do, I can it not deny - - - Spe. 692 
Greatly to find quarrel in a straw - - - Sha. 835 
Greatness, Goodness and ... - Sch. 262 

— of the world Sch. 34 



Grecian OfiA 

Guid ~ uu 

G-recian genius ------ gch, 285 

— girl's dream of the Blessed Islands - Moore 148 

— urn, Ode on a - - - - - - Keats 234 

Greece --------- Tho. 213 

— E\ ening in ------ Moore 659 

— Gods of -------- Sch. 82 

— Isles of- ------- Byron 368 

— Liberty of — a sonnet ----- Wor. 276 

— sound thy Homer's Rome - Cow. 551 

— To E. L., on his travels in - Ten. Ill 
Greek air ------- - Moore 537 

— Amazon, Song of - - - - - - - Bry. 71 

— boy, The ------ Bry. 120 

— epigram, From a ------ Rog. 246 

— funeral chant ------ Hem. 143 

— isle, Bride of the ------ Hem. 155 

— parting song - - - - - Hem. 144 

— partisan, The ------- Bry. 108 

— poems -------- Her. 545 

— slave (Powers')— a sonnet - - - Bro. 91 

— song of exile Hem. 142 

— songs -------- Hem. 307 

— tradition, A - - - - - - - Hen?. 141 

— verses translated ------ Cow. 513 

— war-song translated ----- Byron 244 

Greekism - - - - - - ' - - Sch. 265 

Greeks, Song of the ._..._ Cam. 175 

Green, servant of king, c. in Richard ii. - - Sha. 356 

— grow the rushes, O — a song - - - Burns 195 

— house rose. (Charlotte Smith.) - - - Flo. 305 

— isles of ocean, The ----- Hem. 240 

— linnet, The ------- Wor. 146 

— little vaulter in the sunny grass - - Flo. 375 

— mountain boys ------ Bry. 178 

— river -------- Bry. 27 

— wave the oak forever ----- Hem. 411 

— willow ! over whom the perilous - - Flo. 145 
Greenock — a sonnet ------ Wor. 407 

Green well, Dora. Dialogue from Soul-gardening Flo. 162 
Greenwood, Grace (pseud.). See Lippincott, Sara J. 

Gregory, Lord — a song ----- Burns 250 

— remember thy sv/ashing blow - - - Sha. 712 

— servant, c. in Romeo and Juliet - - Sha. 712 
Greiers, Count of ------ Bry. 152 

Gremio, c. in Taming of the Shrew - - Sha. 229 

Grenville, to thee my gratitude is due - - Rog. 345 

Greta, what fearful listening ! — a sonnet - Wor. 397 

Grey, Lady, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - - Sha. 526 

— lord, of Wilton, Sonnet to Spe. 27 

— Lord, c. in Richard iii. - - - - - Sha. 556 



f>A-i Grecian 

Grey, Sir Eustace ------ Cra. 499 

— Sir Thomas, c. in Henry v. - - - - Sha. 439 

— thou hast served, and well, the sacred - Kog. 345 
Grief - Bro. 83; Her. 264; Pro. 153 

— fills the room up of my absent - - - Sha. 345 

— Immoderate Cow. 523 

— Maternal - Wor. 112 

— sate upon a rock and sighed - Bro. 108 

— thou hast lost an ever ready - - - Wor. 230 
Grief 's neglect. (Tennyson.) - Flo. 502 
Grieve for the man who hither came - - Wor. 316 

— not the holy spirit - Her. 231 

Grieving, if aught inanimate e'er - - - Byron 304 

Griffith, an usher, c. in Henry viii. - - - Sha. 592 

Grimes, Peter Cra. 461 

Grisette, La- Hoi. 78 

Grizzel Grim, Epitaph on Burns 180 

Groaner of Wurtemberg Sch. 54 

Groaning for the spirit ----- Wes. 319 

Grose, Captain, the antiquary - - - Burns 122 

— r Francis, Epitaph for ----- Burns 180 

-— — Letters to Burns 476 

Ground ivy - Flo. 180 

Group from Tartarus - - - - - - Sch. 42 

Grow to my lip, thou sacred kiss - * - - Moore 72 

Grown old in rhyme, 'twere barbarous - - Pope 370 

Growth — a sonnet ----- - Goe. 215 

— of a poet's mind Wor. 501 

— of the legend, The ----- Low. 74 

Growths of jasmine turned - Flo. 130 

Grufydd's feast ------ Hem. 244 

Grumio, c. in Taming of the Shrew - - - Sha. 229 

Grutli, Flower from field of - - - - Hem. 324 

Grutt, Sir Guisebert, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 

Guadarrama, Padre Cura of, c. in Sp. Student Lon. 44 

Guard her by your truthful words - - - Bro. 287 

— room, The. (Lady of the Lake.) - - Scott 151 
Guardian, The - - - - - - P. of F. 112 

Guarding the mountains round - - - Lon. 348 

Gude pity me, because I'm little - - Burns 138 

Gudrida's prophecy Low. 356 

Gudrun - - Lon. 252 

Guenevere, Queen Mer. 452 

Guerrilla leader's vow, The ... - Hem. 220 

— song - - Hem. 333 

Guerrillas, French and Spanish - - - Wor. 282 

Guernica, Oak of— a sonnet - - - - Wor. 281 

Guid e'en to you, Kimmer — a song - - Burns 277 

— mornin' to your majesty ! - - - - Burns 84 

— speed and furder to you, Johnny - Burns 158 



Guide 
Hamburg 



202 



Guide, The P. of F. 182 

Guiderius, son of Cymbeline, c. in Cymbeline Sha. 944 

Guides of Life - - Sch. 246 

Guido, c. in Vespers of Palermo - - - Hem. 493 

— I would that Lapo, thou and I - - - She. 535 
Guidwif e, count the Lawin — a song - - Burns 228 
Guildenstern, a courtier, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 
Guildford, Sir Henry, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 
Guilt and Sorrow - - - - - - Wor. 32 

Guiltier than him they try - Sha. 71 

Guinevere — an idyl ------ Ten. 328 

— and Launcelot - - - - - - Ten. 114 

Gullcrammer, c. in Doom of Devorgoil - Scott 524 

Gulliver, Lemuel, To - - - - - - Pope 394 

Gunpowder Plot— a sonnet - Wor. 371 

Guns, Epigrams to the inventor of - - - Cow. 571 

Gurney, James, a servant, c. in King John Sha. 332 

Gurth, earl of East Anglia, c. in Harold - - Ten. 615 

Guvener B. is a sensible man - - - Low. 176 

Guy - Erne. 33 

— count of Ponthieu, c. in Harold - - Ten. 615 

— lord of Occo, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - Tay. 30 
Guyon, Mme., Translations from - - - Cow. 612 

— Sir, Legend of - . - Spe. 109 

Gwyn was a farmer, whom the farmers all Cra. 23 

Gypsies - - - - - - - - - Wor. 175 

Gypsy song ------- Goe. 76 

— Spanish - Eliot 141 

Gypsy's selling song ----- i n g. 513 

H. C, To (six years old.) - - - - Wor. 87 

H. C. M.— H. S.— J. K. W. - - - . Hoi. 232 

Ha! I am the lord of the earth! - - - Goe. 208 

— where ye gaun, ye crowlin' ferlie ! - Burns 76 
Habington, William. Night - - - - Flo. 436 
Hackneyed in business, wearied - - - Cow. 223 
Hacon, king, Death of - Mer. 240 
Had I a cave — a song Burns 255 

— I but served my God with half the zeal - Sha. 612 

— I the Wyte — a song ... - Burns 271 

— sighed to many, though he loved but one Byron 279 

— this effulgence disappeared - - - - Wor. 393 

— we never loved sae kindly - - - - Burns 232 
Hadst thou a genius on thy peak - - - Cam. 304 

— thou stayed, I must have fled - - - Lon. 286 
Hae ye ony pots or pans - - - - Burns 296 
Hsec quoque, Manse, tuse meditantur carmina Mil. 550 
Hans Nameh. (Divan, ii.) - Goe. 365 
Hagar in the wilderness - - - - Wil. 7 
Hagenau, Cobbler of - Lon. 277 






903 Guide 

^ uo Hamburg 

Haggis, To a - - - - - - - Burns 103 

Hahnemann, Dr., Ode to - - - - - Hood 464 

Hail, day of music, day of love - - - Mac. 214 

— gifted" youth, whose passion-breathing White 209 

— holy, holy, Lord - - - - - - Wes. 229 

— holy light! ------- Mil. 63 

— memory, hail, in thy exhaustless - - Eog. 290 

— mildly, pleasing solitude - Tho. 416 

— mother of mankind !----- Mil. 120 

— muse ! But each muse by this time - - Mer. 78 

— native language ! - Mil. 402 

— orient conqueror of gloomy night ! - - Wor. 288 

— poesie ! thou nymph reserved ! - - - Burns 143 

— power divine, who by thy sole command - Tho. 445 

— thairm inspirin' ratthn' Willie - - - Burns 165 

— the day that sees Him rise - Wes. 66 
-*- to posterity ! ------ Whi. 359 

— to the chief who in triumph advances - - Scott 121 

— to the crown by freedom shaped - - Wor. 661 

— to the fields — with dwellings sprinkled o'er Wor. 329 

— to thee, blithe spirit - - - - - She. 427 

— to thee, mountain beloved - Sch. 198 

— to this teeming stage of strife - - - Byron 239 

— to thy cold and clouded beam - - - Scott 187 

— to thy face and odors, glorious sea ! - - Cam. 269 

— twilight, sovereign of one peaceful hour - Wor. 238 

— virgin queen, o'er many an envious bar - Wor. 370 

— wedded love ! mysterious law - - - Mil. 102 

— Zaragoza ! — a sonnet ----- Wor. 279 

Hair, wax, rouge, honey, teeth you buy - - Cow. 521 

Halbert, To. (Monastery.) - Scott 425 

Halbert's invocation ------ Scott 425 

Hale, Sarah J. Song of the flower angels - Flo. 367 

Half a league, half a league - Ten. 252 

— our knowledge we must snatch - - Pope 224 

— vexed, half pleased, thy love will feel - - Goe. 39 
Halibut, To the memory of the - - - Cow. 422 
Halidon Hill. A dramatic sketch - - - Scott 462 

Hall of Cynddylan - Hem. 242 

Halleck, Fitz-Greene Whi. 410 

Dedication of monument to - - - Hoi. 274 

Hallo there ! a glass ! - - - - - - Goe. 66 

Halloo your name to the reverberate hills - Sha. 287 

Hallowed be thy name ----- Ten. 720 

— earth ! with indignation - Cam. 132 

— ground Cam. 213 

Halloween ------- Burns 45 

Hamatreya Erne. 35 

Hambleton Hills, Journey across - - - Wor. 235 

Hamburg, Fire at ----- - Low. 60 



Hamilton 9A/1 

Harold ^ Ui 

Hamilton, Gavin, Dedication to - - - Burns 90 

Epistle to Burns 163 

Epitaph on ----- - Burns 185 

Letters to - - • Burns 360, 362, 368, 382, 395 

— James, Letter to - - - - - - Burns 435 

— Mr., Inscription for .--'-- -Cow. 506 
Hamlet — a tragedy- ...... g na< sn 

Hamlet's soliloquy. (Shakespeare.) - - Fav. 98 

Hampden, c. in Charles the First - - - She, 492 

Hamper, On receipt of a - - - - - Cow. 469 

Hampton Beach Whi. 127 

Hand, beautiful, Sonnet to a - , - - Eos. 305 

— in hand ! and lip to lip - - - - Goe. 43 
Handful of translations --.---_ Lon. 336 
Hands all round - Ten. 487 

— off ! thou tithe-fat plunderer ! - Whi. 146 
Handsome in three hundred pounds - - Sha. 56 
Hang out our banners on the outer wall - - Sha. 808 

— out our banners on the stately towers - Hoi. 277 
Hanging of the crane ------ Lon. 352 

Hangs upon the cheek of night - - - Sha. 718 

Hans Sachs' poetical mission - Goe. 209 

Hapless doom of woman - Ten. 606 

Haply some rajah first in the ages gone - - Ing. 459 

Happiest land, The ------ Lon. 21 

— of all is that her gentle spirit - - - Sha. 194 
Happiness. (Keble.) Fav. 99 

— (Eobert Pollok.) Fav. 269 

— and vision — a song ----- Goe. 39 

— depends as nature shows - Cow. 136 

— Ode to - Low. 367 

— of temper — an essay ----- q i # 375 

— On - Tho. 387 

— our being's end and aim ! - Pope 210 

— Search after ..--_. Scott 406 
Happy always was it for that son - - - Sha. 534 

— and free, securely blessed - - - Dry. 535 

— art thou, darling insect Goe. 199 

— change, The - - - - - - - Cow. 81 

— couple, The — a song ----- Q- oe# $2 

— friendship — a song ----- Burns 244 

— husband, The ------- Col. 165 

— infant ! to thee an infinite space - - Sch. 249 

— life of a parson — an invitation - - - Pope 449 

— man be his dole ------ Sha. 57 

— man, The ------- Tho. 414 

— marriage, The," Eemarks on - - - Burns 300 

— solitude — unhappy men. (Mme. Guy on.) - Cow. 624 

— songster, perched above - Cow. 519 

— soul, thy days are ended - Wes. 140 



oak Hamilton 

^ uo Harold 

Happy the feeling from the bosom thrown - Wor. 226 

— the man who sees a God employed - - Cow. 269 

— the man whose wish and care - - - Pope 358 

— the souls to Jesus joined -..--- Wes. 373 

— ye leaves ! when as those lily hands - - Spe. 687 

— yes, dearest ! blest ------ Wil. 263 

Happy's the love which meets return - - Burns 308 

Hapsburgh, Count of ----- - Sch. 180 

Harapha of G-ath, c. in Samson Agonistes - Mil. 350 

Harcourt, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - - - Sha. 409 

— Simon, Epitaph on Pope 343 
Hard is the fate of him who loves - - - Tho. 461 

— it is, but not for thee Wes. 276 

— task ! — a sonnet ------ Wor. 440 

— 'tis on a fox's traces ----- Goe. 238 

— to be won and only by a few - - - Wor. 700 
Hardcastle, c. in She Stoops to Conquer - Gol. 270 
Hare, Epitaph on a - - - - - - Cow. 413 

Harebell, Poesy of the Flo. 205 

— The. (R. Heber.) Flo. 205 

— The. (Walter Scott.) Flo. 208 

— The. (C. Symonds.) - - - . - - Flo. 207 
Harfleur, Governor of, c. in Henry v. - - Sha. 439 
Hark ! a lover binding sheaves - - - Ing. 442 

— from Spain, indignant Spain - - Moore 538 

— from the battlements of yonder tower - Cam. 211 

— how all the welkin rings ... - Wes. 61 

— how the birds do sing - - - Her. 220 

— how the mesry bells - - - - White 373 

— like the sea in wrath the Heavens - - Sch. 42 
*— my soul ! it is the Lord ----- Cow. 63 

— the bells are tolling mournfully - - Sch. 31 

— the hours are softly calling - - Pro. 333 

— the lark at heaven's gate - Sha. 952 
*— the loud tempest shakes the earth - Burns 328 

— the owlet flaps his wings - She. 554 

— the vesper hymn is stealing - - Moore 525 

— they whisper, angels say - Pope 359 

— 'tis some sprite who sweeps - • - White 210 

— 'tis the breeze ------ Moore 350 

— 'tis the sound that charms - - - Moore 537 

— 'tis the thrush — a sonnet - Wor. 248 

— 'tis the twanging horn ! - - - - - Cow. 303 

— what, now loud, now low - - - - Erne. 248 

— yonder eagle lonely wails - - - Burns 329 

Harmful, The P. of F. 175 

Harmonious powers, with nature works - Wor. 453 

Harness the impatient years - Bry. 320 

Harold --------- Scott 39 

— a play -------- Ten. 615 



Harfager 9f)f\ 

Haydon ^ uo 

Harfager, Song of. (Pirate.) - Scott 434 

— the dauntless - Scott 310 

Haroun Al Kaschid ------ Lon. 378 

Harp and needlecase ----- Wor. 150 

— couldst thou venture ----- Wor. 371 

— of the mountain-land ! -"---■- Hem. 239 

— of the North! farewell ! - - - - -Scott 159 

— of the North, that moldering - - - Scott 110 

— that once thro' Tara's halls - - - Moore 215 

— The ------ Erne. 203: Scott 215 

— the monarch minstrel swept - - Byron 190 
Harper, The - - -.-..- - - Cam. 209 

— The. (Italy.) - - - - - - - Kog. 160 

Harpswell, Dead-ship of - Whi. 309 

Harriet, To ------- She. 31 

Harris, M., Letter to - - - - - White 73 

Harrison, William H., Death of - - - Wil. 232 

Harrow, In churchyard of - - - - Byron 176 

— on-the-Hill, View of Byron 140 
Harry, whose tuneful and well-measured - Mil. 477 
Hart-leap well ------ -Wor. 183 

Harte, Francis Bret. John Burns of Gettysburg Fav. 432 

Harts-horn tree, near Penrith - - - - Wor. 389 

Hartz mountains, Journey over - - - G-oe. 168 

Harvard Alumni meeting, 1857 - - - - Hoi. 147 

— College centennial, 1836 - Hoi. 32 

— commemorative ode, 1865 - - - - Low. 384 

— Memorial Hall— dedication - - - Hoi. 275 
Laying of corner-stone - Hoi. 274 

— See also Cambridge. * 

Harvest moon. Ode to the - White 269 

— moon, The ------- Lon. 382 

Harvey, Charles. Christmas Day - - - Flo. 304 

— M. Gabriel, Sonnets to Spe. 702, 703 
Has auld Kilmarnock seen the deil? - Burns 95 

— sorrow thy young days shaded - - Moore 248 

— there any old fellow got mixed - - - Hoi. 213 

— this fellow no feeling of his business - Sha. 840 

Haschish, The - - Whi. 201 

Hasdrubal. See Asdrubal. 

Hassan, c. in Hellas ------ She. 377 

Hassan's slave - - - - - - P. of F. 80 

Hast any philosophy in thee - Sha. 215 

— thou a charm to stay the morning - - Col. 168 

— .thou a friend? Thou hast - - - -Cow. 517 

— thou come with the heart of thy childhood Hem. 218 

— thou e'er watched the infant - - - Sch. 241 

— thou left thy blue course in heaven - - Oss. 209 

— thou named all the birds ... - Erne. 78 

— thou not marked, when o'er thy startled Scott 270 



0A7 Harfager 

- u » Haydon 

Hast thou not seen, officious with delight - She. 575 

— thou o'er the clear heavens of thy soul - Pro. 187 

— thou seen in winter's stormiest - - - Flo. 180 

— thou seen that lordly castle - - - Lon. 23 

— thou seen with flash incessant - - - Wor. 469 

— thou then survived ----- Wor. 158 
Haste not ! rest not ! (Goethe.) - - - Fav. 423 

— thee, nymph, whose winged spear - - Moore 55 

— with your torches, haste ! Hem. 378 
Hasten thee ! Kronos !-,--- Goe. 171 
Hastings, c. in She Stoops to Conquer - - Gol. 270 

— Lord, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - - - Sha. 409 

— Lord, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - - - Sha. 526 

— Lord, c. in Richard iii. Sha. 556 

— lord, Death of - Dry. 19 

— Warren, To Cow. 489 

Hate-song, A - - - - - - - She. 574 

Hated by fiends and men, who feel - - Wes. 240 

Hath not a Jew eyes? ----- Sha. 192 

Hatred and vengeance, my eternal portion Cow. 50 

— of sin - - - - - - - - Cow. 88 

Hatton, Sir Christopher, Sonnet to - - Spe. 25 

Haunch of venison — an epistle - - - - Gol. Ill 

Haunted chamber, The Lon. 228 

— ground Hem. 380 

— house, The ------ Hood 106, 214 

— houses Lon. 214 

— palace, The- - Poe. 80 

— tree, The - - - - - - - - Wor. 199 

Have good wuTto all that lives - - - Arn. 157 

— I dreamed? or was it real - - - Lon. 231 

— I not voyaged, friend beloved - - - Whi. 387 

— none appeared as tillers - - Rog. 112 

— not you seen the timid tear - - - Moore 99 

— ye heard of our hunting - - - - Whi. 48 

— you heard the story that gossips tell - Fav. 432 

— you heard of the wonderful one-hoss shay - Hoi. 172 

— you not heard the poets tell - - - Fav. 442 

— you not noted in some family - Ros. 234 

— you read in the Talmud of old - - - Lon. 225 
Havequick, c. in Faust ----- Faust 170 
Haverhill Library, Opening of Whi. 412 
Having been tenant long to a rich man - - Her. 121 

— sent off the troops to brave major - - Moore 331 
Hawthorn, Poesy of - Flo. 54 

— To the. (Ronsard.) Flo. 54 

Hawthorne, Nathaniel Lon. 319 

Hay, Charles, Letter to - - - - - Burns 391 

Hay, Mrs. Lewis. See Chalmers, Miss - Burns 384 

Haydon, B.R., To— a sonnet- - - - Wor. 234 



Haydon 
He 



208 



Haydon, forgive me that I cannot speak - Keats 252 

Haydon's portrait of Napoleon - - - Wor. 247 

— portrait of Wellington Wor. 247 

— portrait of Wordsworth - Bro. 82 
Hayes, president, To, at a dinner - - - Hoi. 314 
Hayley, William, Sonnet to - - - Cow. 491, 409 
Hayley's epitaph to Cowper - - - White 460 

— picture, On receiving Cow. 494 

Hazel blossoms - - - - - - - Whi. 380 

Hazeldean, Jock of - - * - - - - Scott 400 

He and I — a sonnet - Eos. 275 

— and she Arn. 168 

— bent his head upon his breast - - - Bro. 614 

— best can paint them who shall feel - - Pope 117 

— came like a dream in the dawn of life - She. 479 

— came to Florence long ago - - - Low. 340 

— ceased ; but left so pleasing on their ear - Odys. 185 

— clasps the crag with hooked hands - - Ten. 118 

— clenched his pamphlets in his fists - Burns 177 

— comes — the frost spirit comes - - - Whi. 91 

— dies and makes no sign Sha. 515 

— does it with a better grace - Sha. 287 

— doth bestride the narrow ... - Sha. 766 

— draweth near in mighty Pan - - - Faust 207 

— draweth out the thread ----- Sha. 150 

— endeth and a kind of spell - Lon. 243 

— fills, he bounds, connects and equals all - Pope 193 

— flies the event, he leaves the event to me Ten. 449 

— found me in a desert place - Wes. 255 

— from his lass him lavender hath sent - Flo. 70 

— gave his honors to the world - - - Sha. 614 

— gave to misery all he had — a tear - - Fav. 34 

— gives what he gives ----- Fav. 400 

— has done the work of a true man - - Whi. 338 

— has singed the beard of the king ■ - - Lon. 373 

— hath a daily beauty in his life - - - Sha. 905 

— hath a tear for pity ----- Sha. 430 

— hath eaten me out of house and home - Sha. 415 

— hath indeed better bettered expectation - Sha. Ill 

— hath put all things under his feet - - Bry. 312 

— hath refused it in the open court - - - Sha. 200 

— hath wrought the purpose through - - Arn. 152 

— is dead, the beautiful youth- - - - Lon. 321 

— is gone on the mountain - . - - - Scott 130 

— is gone to the desert land ! - Lon. 336 

— is the half part of a blessed man - - Sha. 338 

— is too weet a melancholy carle - - - Keats 273 

— is well paid that is well satisfied - - Sha. 200 

— jests at scars that never felt a wound - Sha. 719 

— knew she did not love him, but so long - Ing. 227 



200 iS ydo:i 

He left a corsair's name to other times - Byron 49 

— listened at the porch that day - - - Bro. 296 

— lives long who lives well. (Randolph.) - Fav. 161 

— lives not who can refuse me - - - Erne. 286 

— lives who lives to G-od alone -"..-- Cow. 445 

— made a chimney in my father's house - Sha. 517 
- makes a solitude and calls it peace ! - Byron 24 

— makes sweet music ----- Sha. 30 

— might have took his answer - - - - Sha. 286 

— mourns his frustrated intent - - - Wes. 236 

— murmurs near the running brooks - - Wor. 416 

— must need go that the devil drives - - Sha. 257 

— never smiled again - Hem. 137 

— paused and questioned with his eye - Whi. 301 

— planted where the deluge plowed - -Erne. 276 

— rests with the immortals. (E. H. W.) - Whi. 396 

— rose at dawn and, fired with hope - - Ten. 387 

— said and wept ; then spread his sails - Vir. 239 

— sat and read a book with silver - - - Wil. 260 

— sat in silence on the ground - - - Hem. 388 

— sat upon the ass's foal and rode - - - Wil. 39 

— saw the one great sacrifice - - - Wes. 27'3 

— sleeps not here, in hope and prayer - - Hoi. 180 

— spoke of Burns ; men rude and rough - Low. 44 

— stole my tender heart away," Remarks on Burns 302 

— stood upon the world's broad threshold - Low. 24 

— that dies pays all debts - - - - ' - Sha. 13 

— that doth the ravens feed - Sha. 211 

— that filches from me my good name - - Sha. 894 

— that is robbed not wanting - - - Sha. 895 

— that is struck blind Sha. 714 

— that is thy friend indeed - - - Sha. 1054 

— that is weary let him sit ..... Her. 164 

— that lacks time to mourn lacks time - Tay. 57 

— that only rules by terror ... - Ten. 390 

— that stands upon a slippery place - - Sha. 345 

— thought to quell the stubborn hearts of oak Ten. 477 

— too has flitted from his secret nest - - Col. 205 

— took the color of his vest - Erne. 240 

— turned their water into blood - - - Wes. 243 

— wales a portion with judicious care Burns 52 

— wanders like a day-appearing dream - She. 507 

— was a man of an unbounded stomach - - Sha. 614 

— was a man, take him for all in all - - Sha. 814 

— was a prince with golden hair - - - Mer. 442 

— was a scholar and a ripe and good one - Sha. 614 

— was all sunshine, in his lace - - - Hoi. 146 

— was ever precise in promise-keeping - Sha. 68 

— was indeed the glass ----- Sha. 418 

— was perfumed like a milliner - - - Sha. 385 

14 



He 
Heaven's 



210 



He was the first always; Fortune - 

— wears the rose of youth - 

— who could view the book of destiny - 

— who died at Azan sends 

— who has a thousand friends - 

— who has no hands - - - - 

— who hath bent him o'er the dead - 

— who in impious times undaunted stood 

— who is aware ! - 

— who is on his travels and loves 

— who is power, is grace and beauty 

— who instructs the youthful crew - . 

— who knows himself and others - 

— who of Rankin sang lies stiff - 

— who sets sail from Naples - 

— who sits from day to day - 

— who sublime in epic numbers rolled - 

— who surpasses or subdues mankind 

— who with life makes sport - 

— whom thou ne'er leavest - 

— will not with his purchase part - 

— willed, and heaven's blue arch - 
Head and front of my offending 

— is not more native to the heart 

— of thy church triumphant - 

— unmellowed, but his judgment 
Heal us, Emmanuel ! here we are - 

Healer, The - 

Healing of daughter of Jairus - - Wil. 
Health. (E. C. Pinckney.) - - Poe 

— peace and competence - 

— To 

— to Lord Melville 

— to the chieftain from his clansman - 

— to the Maxwells' veteran chief 
Heap high the farmer's wintry hoard - 

— on more wood ! the wind is chill - 
Hear a song that was born in the land 

— all ye angels, progeny of light 

— Alfred, father of the state - 

— Father, hear thy faint afflicted flock - 

— holy, holy, holy, Lord 

— I the portal not flying? - 

— it not, Duncan 

— land of cakes ! - 

— Lord, the song of praise and prayer 

— me but once - 

— now a legend of the days of old 

— sweet spirit, hear the spell - 

— the sledges with the bells - 



43 
91 
51 



- Pro, 214 
Sha. 930 

- Dry. 315 
Arn. 165 

- Erne. 248 

- Erne. 238 
Byron 2 

Dry. 320 

P. of F. 77 

- Rog. 
P. of F. 

Moore 

- Goe. 208 

- Burns 188 

- Rog. 151 

- Cow. 444 
Byron 133 

- Byron 307 

- Goe. 224 

- Goe. 172 

- Wes. 183 
P. of F. 84 

- Sha. 883 
Sha. 813 

- Wes. 27 

Sha. 27 

- Cow. 53 

- Whi. 393 
42; Fav. 113 
35; Fav. 184 

- Pope 212 
Cow. 515 

- Scott 379 

- Scott 388 
Burns 137 

- Whi. 117 

- Scott 92 

Mer. 29 

- Mil. 125 
Tho. 470 

- Bry. 62 
■ Wes. 186 

- Sch. 105 
Sha. 793 

-Burns 122 

Cow. 468 

Moore 528 

Bry. 268 

- Col. 344 
Poe 60, 388 



211 



He 
Heaven's 



Hear thou great Anna, whom three realms 

obey Pope 71 

— thou great father of the gods - - - Spe. 582 

— what God the Lord hath spoken - - - Cow. 58 

— what Highland Nora said - - - - Scott 401 

— what the desolate Rizpah said - Bry. 47 

— you this triton of the minnows - - Sha. 669 
Heard ye of Nimrud? - P. of F. 62 

— ye of the tree of France - Burns 144 

— ye so merry the little bird sing? - - - Scott 391 

— ye the Gothic trumpet's blast? - - - Hem. 108 
Hearer of prayer, The - - - - P. of F. 96 

Hearken, hearken ! Bro. 55 

Heart and Nature ------ Mer. 251 

— healed by mercy Cow. 88 

— my heart, what means this feeling? - - Goe. 48 

— of the Bruce, The Ayt. 46 

— of the night — a sonnet ----- Ros. 259 
Hearts - Pro. 338 

— compass— a sonnet Ros. 240 

— ease -------- Mo. 82 

— ease. (Mary Howitt.) - - - - - Flo. 79 

— ease. (Mrs. Sheridan.) - Flo. 81 

— ease, Poesy of the Flo. 78 

— fine gold. (W. O. Bourne.) - - - Fav. 312 

— haven — a sonnet - Ros. 237 

— hope — a sonnet Ros. 229 

— of oak that have bravely - - - Cam. 227 
Heath, Benjamin H., Epitaph on - - - Mac. 210 

— Sir N., archbishop, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 

— Moorland blossoms. (Eliza Cook.) - - Flo. 171 

— rose, The — a song - Goe. 22 

— Sprig of. (Mrs. Grant.) - Flo. 173 
Heaven - Her. 292 

— and earth — a sonnet Bro. 92 

— asks no surplice round the heart - - - Hoi. 22 

— doth with us as we with torches - - Sha. 67 

— first taught letters for some wretches - - Pope 110 

— from all creatures hides the book of fate Pope 189 

— lies about us in our infancy ! - - Wor. 499 

— Ode to ------- She. 416 

— Of - Wes. 381 

— opened wide Fav. 71 

— still guards the right Sha. 369 

— that frowns on me looks - - - Sha. 590 

— weeps above the earth - Ten. 470 
Heavenborn Helen, Sparta's queen - - - Ros. 19 
Heavenly beauty, Hymn of - - - - Spe. 662 

— love, Hymn of Spe. 659 

Heaven's breath smells wooingly here - - Sha. 792 



Heaven's 919 

Hemans * iJ 

Heaven's cup held down to me I drain - - Low. 89 

— ebon vault, studded with stars - - - She. 39 

— On a survey of the White 304 

Heavy brigade at Balaklava, Charge of - Ten. 728 

Hebe - Low. 66 

Heber, Reginald. The Harebell - - - Flo. 205 

To memory of Hem. 407 

Hebrew mother, The ----- Hem. 354 
Hebrews, On passages in - - - - Wes. 304, 369 
Hecate, a witch, c. in Macbeth - - - Sha. 788 
Hector and Ajax, Combat of - Iliad 171 

— and Andromache - - - - - Bro. 177 
Episodes of Iliad 154 

— Death of ------- Iliad 436 

— in the garden - - - - Bro. 67; Flo. 442 

— son of Priam, c. in Troilus and Cressida - Sha. 622 
Hector's Farewell - - - - - - Sch. 19 

Hedderwich. Joy and Sorrow - - - Fav. 21 
Hee Balou ! — a song ----- Burns 272 

Heel of a shoe, On finding the - - - Cow. 25 
Height of the ridiculous ----- Hoi. 12 

Heine, Heinrich, Paraphrases upon - - Bro. 165 
Helen, c. in Cymbeline ----- Sha. 944 

— wife of Menelaus, c. in Troilus and Cressida Sha. 622 

— c. in Faust - Faust 170 

— in a huff Wil. 297 

— of Tyre - Lon. 397 

— thy beauty is to me - Poe 169 

— To - - - Poe 72, 169 

Helena, a gentlewoman, c. in All's Well - Sha. 254 

— c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - - - Sha. 161 
Helenus, son of Priam, c. in Troil. and Cress. Sha. 622 
Helicanus, a lord of Tyre, c. in Pericles - - Sha. 977 

Helicon, Anecdote of Sch. 305 

Heligoland, Death-boat of Cam. 250 

Heliodorus in the temple - Hem. 112 

Helios Hyperionides Mer. 469 

Heliotrope, The (anon.) Flo. 113 

— ' ' She enamored of the sun - Flo. 114 
Hell— The Inferno. (Cary.) - Dante 1 

— and heaven - P. of F. 156 

— is a city much like London - - - She. 306 

— (Peter Bell the Third.) She. 306 

Hellas — a lyric drama She. 375 

Hell's dunnest gloom, or night unlustrous Dante 174 
Help, angels ! make assay ! Bow - - - Sha. 831 

— in peril, The P. of F. 30 

— me, Cassius, or I sink !-.-"-- Sha. 766 
Helvellyn Scott 374 

— Ascent of Wor. 197 



HEMANS, MRS. FELICIA D 

Abencerrage, The .... 
Adopted Child, The . 
Affections, Songs of the 
-Aged Indian, The 
Alaric in Italy .... 
Album Leaf, On an . 
Alps, Evening among the 
American Forest Girl 
Ancient Greek Song of Exile 

Angel Visits 

Antony and Cleopatra, Last ban- 
quet of .... 
Arabella Stuart .... 
Arabian anecdote, Song of an . 
Asdrubal, Wife of . 
Barmecides, Mourner for the . 
Belshazzar's Feast .... 
Bended Bow, The 
Bernardo del Carpio 
Birds of Passage, The 

— Release, The .... 
Boon of Memory . . , . 
Bowl of Liberty .... 
Brandenburg Harvest Song 
Breathings of Spring . 
Breeze from Shore, The . 
Bride of the Greek Isle . 
Bride's Fare .veil .... 

Bring Flowers 

Cambrian in America 
Caravan in the Deserts . 
Cardan's Prophecy 
Carthage, Marius among the 

ruins of 

Casabianca , 

Castri, View from .... 
Caswallon's Triumph 
Cavern of the Three Tells . 
Chamois-hunter's Love, The . 
Chant of the Bards 
Characters: Abdullah, a Moorish 

prince. Siege of Valencia 

— Alberti. Vespers of Palermo 

— Alphonzo. Siege of Valencia 

— Alvar Gonzalez " 

— Anselmo, a monk. V. of Pal. 

— Carlos . Siege of Valencia 

— Constance, sister to Eribert. 

Vespers of Palermo 

— De Couci " 

— Elmina, wife of Gonzalez. 

Siege of Valencia 

— Eribert, Viceroy. V. of Pal. 

— Garcias, a knight. Siege of V. 

— Guido. Vespers of Palermo 

— Hernandez, a priest. Siege of V. 

— Montalba. Vespers of Palermo 

— Procida, Count di " 

— Raimond di Procida " 

— Theresa, an attendant. 

Siege of Valencia 

— Vittoria. Vespers of Palermo 

— Ximena^ dtr. of Elmina. 

Siege of Valencia 
Charmed Picture, The . 
Chieftain's Son, The . 
Child and Dove .... 

— of Mrs. H., on his birthday, 

To a 



1 '-> 


Heaven'^ 


~ J 




Hemans 


[A D., Poems of: 




64 


Child of the Forests . 


. 381 


408 


Child's Last Sleep . 


. 419 


200 


Christ stilling the Tempest . 375 


333 


Christmas Carol 


. 428 


107 


Cid, Songs of the 


. 252 


2(34 


Cid's Battle-song . 


. 475 


331 


— Death- bed 


. 253 


100 


— Departure into exile . 


. 252 


142 


— Funeral procession 


.' 254 


372 


— Rising, The . 


. 256 




Clanronald, Death of . 


. 335 


104 


Cliffs of Dover, The 


. 360 


149 


Coeur de Lion at the bier of his 


261 


father . 


.138 


110 


Come Home ! 


. 237 


394 


Conqueror's Sleep. The . 


. 342 


280 


Conradin, Death of . 


. 119 


136 


Constadina, The 


. 384 


223 


Coronation of Inez de Castro . 210 


425 


Costanza .... 


. 192 


124 


Crescentius, Widow of 


97 


370 


Cross in the Wilderness . 


. 351 


309 


— of the South . 


. 262 


141 


Crusader's Return . 


. 339 


421 


— War-song . 


. 335 


363 


Cynddylan, Hall of 


. 242 


155 


Dalecarlian Mine» Scene in a . 378 


15G 


Death-day of Korner 


. 412 


33S 


— Hour of . 


. 358 


245 


— of Clanronald 


. 335 


256 


— of Conradin 


. 119 


389 


— song of an Indian Woman . 182 




Delphi, Storm of 


. 307 


259 


Departed Spirit, To a . 


. 212 


348 


— The .... 


. 418 


318 


Deserted House, The 


. 235 


248 


Dial of Flower, The . 


. 349 


130 


Dirge in Siege of Valencia 


. 455 


213 


— of a Child 


. 330 


250 


— of the Highland Chief 


. 334 




Dirges .... 


265, 377 


434 


Distant Ship, The . 


. 425 


493 


Dover, Cliffs of . 


. 360 


431 


Dreamer, The . 


. 367 


431 


Dreaming Child, The 


. 226 


493 


Dreams, Land of . 


. 233 


434 


Druid Chorus on the landing of 




the Romans . 


. 240 


493 


Dying Bard's Prophecy 


. 250 


493 


— Improvisatore, The . 


. 364 




Edith, a tale of the woods 


. 170 


434 


Effigies, The . 


. 415 


493 


Ellis, Sir Henry, Memory of . 332 


434 


Elysium .... 


. 313 


493 


Emigration, Song of . 


. 215 


434 


England, Homes of 


. 385 


493 


England's Dead . 


. 325 


493 


English Soldier's Song of 


Mem- 


493 


ory 


. 379 




Epitaphs: Two Brothers 


, Over 


434 


grave of 


. 375 


493 


Eryri Wen 


. 249 




Evening among the Alps 


. 334 


431 


— Prayer .... 


. 357 


227 


Exile's Dirge, The 


. 225 


324 


Eye, To the , 


. 336 


377 


F'. A. L., To Miss 


263, 264 




Fair Isle, The . 


. 245 


374 


Fairy Favors 


. 432 



Hemans 
Hence 



214 



Farewell to the Dead . . .148 
Father reading the Bible . . 429 

Festal Hours 319 

Fidelity till Death . . .166 
Flower from the Field of Griitli 334 
Flowers, Dial of . . . .349 
Forest Sanctuary ... 25 
Forsaken Hearth .... 367 
Fountain of Oblivion . . . 238 
Fourteenth Century, Tale of the 272 
Funeral Genius, The . . .316 
Genoa, Night-scene in . . . 114 
Gertrude, or Fidelity till death 166 
Grave of a Poetess . . .199 
Graves of a Household . . 426' 

— of Martyrs . . 361 
Greek Funeral Chant . . .143 

— Isle, Bride of the 155 

— Parting Song .... 144 

— Song of Exile . . . .142 

— Songs 307 

— Tradition, A .... 141 
Green Isles of Ocean ... 240 
Grufydd's Feast .... 244 
Griitli, Flower from Field of . 324 
Guerrilla Leader's Vow, The . 220 

— Song 333 

Hall of Cynddylan .... 242 
Hasdrubal. See Asdrubal. 
Haunted Ground . . . .380 
He never smiled again . . 137 
Heber, Reginald, To memory of 407 
Hebrew Mother, The . . .354 
Heliodorus in the Temple . . 112 
Hermitage, In a . . . . 330 
Hero's Death, The . . . .337 
Highland Chief in Waverley . 334 
Hirlas Horn, The . . . .241 
Home, Spells of . . . .423 
Homes of England .... 385 
Hour of Death, The . . .358 

— of Prayer, The . . . .361 

— of Romance, The . . .412 

Howell's Song 248 

I go, sweet friends ! . . 372 

Illuminated City, The . . .422 
Image in Lava. The . . . 428 

— in the Heart, The . . .231 

Imelda 167 

Indian City, The . . . .175 

— tradition, An .... 135 

— with his Dead Child . . .214 

— woman's Death-song . . 182 
Inez de Castro, Coronation of . 210 
Invocation .... 331, 409 
Isle of Founts, The . . . .135 
Italian Girl's Hymn to the Virgin 212 
Italy, Alaric in ... . 107 

Ivan, the Czar 388 

Ivy Song 374 

Joan of Arc in Reims . . . 184 

Juana 188 

Kaiser's Feast . , . . .397 
Kindred Hearts , 347 

King of Aragon's Lament . . 216 
Korner and his sister . . . 410 

— Death-day of . . . .412 
Ladv of Provence . . . 206 

— of the Castle . . . .392 
Lament of Llywarch Hen, The 243 j 
Land of Dreams .... 233 



Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers 416 
Last Banquet of Antony and Cleo- 
patra 104 

— Constantine, The . . .283 

— Rites 353 

— Wish, The 430 

Lays of many Lands . . . 123 
Leaf from Tomb of Virgil . . 324 
Llywarch Hen, Lament of . 243 
Lost Pleiad, The . . . .359 
Louisiana, Stranger in . . 134 
Madeline— a domestic tale . . 195 
Marathon, Sleeper of . . . 263 
Maremma, The . . . .266 
Marius among the Ruins of Car- 
thage 259 

Meeting of the Bards . . .326 

— of the Brothers . . . .429 
Memorial Pillars, The . . 198 
Memory, Boon of. . . . 370 

Memory of , To the . . 382 

Message to the Dead, The . . 229 
Messenger Bird, The . . . 132 
Monarch's Death-bed, A . . 407 
Monumental Inscription . . 376 
Moorish Bridal Song . . .123 
Morgarten, Battle of . . . 322 
Mountain Fires, The . . .249 
Mourner for the Barmecides . 394 
Mozart's Requiem .... 426 
Music of Yesterday . . .366 
Myriologue, or Greek Funeral 

Chant 143 

Necromancer, The .... 403 
Night-scene in Genoa . . . 114 
Oblivion, Fountain of . 239 

Our Daily Paths .... 350 

— Lady's Well . . . .343 
Owen Glyndwr's War-song . 246 
Pakenham, General Sir Edward 332 
Palermo, Vespers of— a tragedy 493 
Palm-tree, The . . . .418 
Parting of Summer, The . . 344 

— Words 228 

Pauline 186 

Peasant Girl of the Rhone . . 180 
Pilgrim Fathers, Landing of the 416 
Platasa, Tombs of . . . .317 
Plays : Siege of Valencia . . 433 

— Vespers of Palermo . . . 493 
Prince Madoc's Farewell . . 247 
Properzia Rossi . . . .163 
Provence, Lady of . .206 
Psyche borne by Zephyrs . . 370 
Queen of Prussia's tomb . . 197 
Records of Women . . .149 
Release of Tasso . . . .399 
Remembered Picture, To a . . 236 
Rest on your Battlefields . . 325 

Return, The 218 

Revelers, The .... 341 
Richard Coeur de Lion and Trou- 
badour 117 

at the bier of his father . 138 

Rock of Cader Idris, The . . 251 
Roman Girl's Song . . . 424 
Rossi, Properzia .... 163 
Scene in a Dalecarlian Mine . 378 

Scio, Voice of 310 

Shade of Theseus, The . . 141 
Sicilian Captive, The . . .386 



215 



Hemans 
Hence 



of 



of Valencia— a dramatic 

poem 

Sisters of Scio, The . 
Sleeper of Marathon 
Soldier's Death-bed . 
Song of our Fathers 

— of the Battle of Morgarten 

— on Arabian anecdote . 
Songs of the Affections 

— oftheCid . 
Sound of the Sea, The 
Southern Cross, Constellation 

the . 
Spanish Chapel, The . 

— Wanderer, Song of the 
Spartan's March, The 
Spells of Home, The 
Spirit's Mysteries, The 

— Return, The 
Spring, Breathings of 
Storm of Delphi, The . 
Stranger in Louisiana 
Stranger's Heart, The . 
Stuart, Arabella . 
Suliote Mother, The 
Summer, Parting of . 
Sunbeam, The . 
Swiss Song, A 

— Tradition, A 
Switzer's Wife, The . 
Sword of the Tomb, The 
Tale of the 14th Century . 
Taliesin's Prophecy 
Tasso and his Sister . 

— Release of . 
Thekla at her Lover's Grave 
Theseus, Shade of . 



Tomb of Madame Langhans . 
Tombs of Plataea .... 
Traveler at the Source of the Nile 
Treasures of the Deep, The . 
Troubadour and Richard Coeur 
de Lion 

— Song 

Trumpet, The 

Two Homes, The .... 
Ulla; or the Adjuration 

Urn and Sword, The . 
Valencia, Siege of —a play . 
Valkyriur Song .... 
Vassal's Lament for the fallen tree 
Vaudois Valleys, The . 

— Wife, The 

Vespers of Palermo— a tragedy . 
View from Castri, The 

Virgil, On a leaf from tomb of . 

Virgin, Hymn to the . 

Voice of Home to the Prodigal . 

— of Scio, The .... 

— of Spring 

Voyager's Dream of Land 
Wakening, The .... 
Wales, Harp of . 

Waverley, Highland Chief in 
Welsh Melodies .... 
Widow of Crescentius, The . 
Wife of Asdrubal, The 
Wild Huntsman, The . 
Wings of the Dove, The . 
Woman on the Field of Battle 

— Records of .... 
Wordsworth, William, To . 
World in the Open Air 

Wreck, The 



317 

348 



117 
385 
357 
229 
404 
312 
433 
129 
139 
383 
219 
493 
318 
324 
212 
362 
310 
328 
413 
3G2 
239 
334 
239 
97 
110 
140 
368 
234 
149 
400 
340 
35f • 



Hemans, Mrs. F. D. Bride's farewell - - Fav. 28i 
Bring flowers ------ Fav. 121 

— — Diver, The ------ Fav. 29* 

Graves of a household - - Fav. 16^ 

Orange-bough, The - - Flo. 121 

Primrose, The - - - - - . - Flo. 6* 

Eevelers, The ------ Fav. 5'« 

Silent Multitude - - - Fav. 22l 

Song of the Rose ----- Flo. 10J 

to L. E. Landon - - - - Bro. 26c 

Trumpet, The ----- - Fav. 10( 

Vernal showers ------ Flo. 42t 

Wreck, The - Fav. 24( 

Hemlock-tree, The ------ Lon. 91 

Hence, away, vindictive thought - - - White 33\ 

— horrible shadow! unreal mockery - - Sha. 80( 

— loathed melancholy ----- Mil. 421 

— lying world, with all thy care - - - Wes. 8V, 

— my epistle— skim the deep - Cow. 558 

— that calm delight the portrait - Rog. 263 

— that fantastic wantonness - Col. 198 

— thou lingerer, light Col. 16 

— to the realms of night - Rog. 330 



Hence 
Herbert 



216 



Hence, vain deluding joys ----- Mil. 425 

Henchman, The - Whi. 412 

Hendec— a syllabus ------ Ten. 395 

Henderson, Matthew, Elegy on - Burns 128 

Henpecked country squire, Epigrams on Burns 186 

— husband, The Burns 186 

Henrici principis Wallise Her. 591 

Henry II.— an epilogue ----- Dry. 522 

— IV., parts 1 and 2 Sha. 382, 409 

— V. Sha. 439 

— VI., parts 1, 2, and 3 - - - Sha. 469, 496, 526 

— VIII. , Life of— a play - Sha. 592 

— Bolingbroke, c. in Richard ii. - Sha. 356 

— earl of Richmond, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - Sha. 526 

— earl of Richmond, c. in Richard iii. - - Sha. 556 

— of Aspen, c. in House of Aspen - - Scott 562 

— prince of Wales, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - Sha. 382 

— son of John, c. in King John - - - Sha. 332 
Henry - - - - Ing. 467 

— I greet thine entrance - White 209 
Hephaestus, c. in Masque of Pandora - - Lon. 341 

— c. in Prometheus Bound - Bro. 115 
Her angel's face, as the great eye of heaven - Spe. 43 

— arms across her breast she laid - - - Ten. 115 

— azure eyes, dark lashes hold in fee - - Bro. 90 

— beauty makes this vault - Sha. 738 

— blue eyes sought the west afar - - - Scott 21 

— countenance was like the majesty - - Wil. 23 

— countenance was radiant with love - - Wil. 20 

— daddie forbad — a song - Burns 215 

— divine skill taught me this - Wor. 145 

— eyes are homes of silent prayer - - Ten. 188 

— eyes are wild ------- Wor. 134 

— eyes as stars of twilight fair - Wor. 171 

— father loved me ; oft invited me - - - Sha. 883 

— fingers shame the ivory keys - - - Whi. 274 

— flowing locks — a song - Burns 274 

— gifts — a sonnet ------ R s. 242 

— goodly eyes like sapphires shining - - Spe. 647 

— hair was tawny with gold - Bro. 358 

— hands are cold, her face is white - - - Hoi. 176 

— hands were clasped, her dark eyes raised Hem. 166 

— household motions light and free - - - Wor. 171 

— I love, To ------ Tho. 460 

— likeness Mme. Ramler bids me - - Sch. 304 

— lips did smell like unto gilliflowers - . Spe. 698 

— lips like cherries charming men to bite - Spe. 647 

— lovely eyes like pinks but newly spread - Spe. 698 

— lute hangs shadowed in the apple-tree - Ros. 302 

— of vour name whose fear inheritance - Her. 2Q 



2 


i >7 Hence 
1 * Herbert 


Her only pilot the soft breeee — a sonnet - - Wor. 


227 


— passions the shy violet -..--- Erne. 


243 


■ — planted eye to-day controls - - - - Erne. 


241 


— ruddy cheeks like unto roses red - - Spe. 


698 


— soul was bred by a throne - . - Bro. 


621 


— spirit's home was in the skies - - - Moore 


443 


— tone is music's own Fav. 


184 


*- voice did quiver as we parted - - - She. 


409 


— voice was ever soft Sha. 


878 


Herald, c. in Clytemnestra - Mer. 


348 


HERBEET, GEORGE, Poems of: 




Aaron 276 


Cross, The .... 


. 265 


iEthiopissa ambit Cestum diversi 588 


Danvers, Sir John, Letter to . 


485 


Affliction . . 128, 145, 158, 178, 186 


— Lord, On ... 


. 308 


Agony, The 118 


Dawning, The .... 


203 


Altar, The 106 


Death 


. 289 


Anagram (Mary— army) . . 163 


Decay 


188 


Andrewes, Lane, Letter to . . 514 


Denial 


. 166 


Angels and Saints, To all . . 163 


Deum, Ad 


580 


Anne, Queen, Death of . . . 591 


Dialogue 


. 206 


Annulo, Conjugali, De . . 572 


— Anthem 


271 


Answer, The 270 


Discharge, The 


. 242 


Antichristi Decore Pontificali, De 565 


Disciplina Ecclesiae, Pro . 


558 


Antiphon .... 136, 181 


Discipline 


. 281 


Archiep, Cantaur, Letter to . 510 


Divine Considerations, Notes to 


405 


Artillery 236 


Divinity 


. 224 


Assurance 254 


Donne, John, To . 


589 


Auctore Andrea Melvino . . 549 


Doomsday .... 


. 290 


Auctorum Enumeratione, De . 575 


Dotage 


268 


Auri sacra Fame, De 576 


Dullness 


. 207 


Avarice 162 


Easter 


123 


Bacon, F., Letter to 501, 509, 511, 586 


— Wings 


. 125 


Bag, The 250 


Elixir 


288 


Banquet, The 284 


Employment .... 140, 164 


Baptism, Holy . . . .126 


Ephesians, chapter iv., verse 30 


231 


Baptismi Ritu, De S . . 563 


Episcopus .... 


. 566 


Bitter-sweet .... 273 


Epitaphium 


545 


British Church, The . . .200 


Even-song .... 


. 147 


Bunch of Grapes, The . .217 


Faith 


132 


Business 204 


Family, The .... 


. £33 


Call, The 256 


Flower, The 


£66 


Catharum . .566 


Foil, The 


. 278 


— quendam 573 


Forerunners, The 


279 


Charms and Knots . . . .185 


Frailty 


. 156 


Christmas 167 


Fratres, Ad 


568 


Church Floor, The . . . .150 


Fulconem Grevilium. Letter to 


498 


— Lock and Key . . . ,150 


Gemina Academia, De 


562 


— Militant, The . . . .295 


Giddiness 


. 216 


— Monuments .... 148 


Glance, The 


273 


— Music 149 


Glimpse, The .... 
God, To (Ad Deum.) . 


. 253 


— Porch, The .... 89 


580 


— Rents and Schisms . . . 237 


Good Friday .... 


. 120 


Clasping of Hands . . . 256 


Grace 


143 


Collar, The 252 


Gratefulness .... 


. 211 


Colossians, chap, iii., verse 3 . 172 


Gratiae de Fluvio contra Redemp- 


Communion, Holy . . . .134 


tores . 


. 508 


Comparatio inter Munus Summi 588 


— de Scriptis .... 


506 


Complaining 241 

Confession 214 


Gratulatio ad Cranfield . 


. 513 


— ad Heath— a letter . 


505 


Conscience 196 


— ad F. Leigh .... 


. 512 


Constancy 157 


— ad Mountag— a letter . 


504 


Content 152 


— de Marchionatu— a letter . 


. 500 


Cornarus, " Temperance and So- 


Greek poems .... 


545 


briety " . . . . 419 


Grief 


264 




Grieve not the Holy Spirit 


231 


Coventry, T., Letter to . . 503 


Heaven 


. 292 



Herbert 
Here 



218 






1*5. 



Henrico. Principis Walliee In Obi 

turn 

Herbert. George, Life of. (Walton 

— H.. Letter to ... . 

— Lady Magdalen, To 
Hold Fast, The 
Holy Baptism 

— Communion 

— Scripture, The . 

Home 

Hope 

Humility 

Impositfone Manuum, De . 
In Metri Genus . . , 
Ingratitude .... 
Inscription in the Parsonage 
Inventa Bellica . 
Inyitation, The 
Jacula Prudentum 

Jesu 

Jews, The .... 

Jordan 

Joseph's Coat 

Judgment . 

Juramento Ecclesiae, De . 

Justice 

Labe, Maculisque, De 
Larvata Gorgone. De 
Latin and Greek Poems . 

Lent 

L'Envoy 

Letter to his Mother 

Letters written at Cambridge 

Life 

Longing .... 
Love 

— Joy 

— Unknown .... 
Lupa Lustri Vaticani, De . 
Maricis Rotatibus, De . 

Mai 

Man's Medley .... 
Marriage Ring, To a . 
Mary Magdalen 

Matin} 

Melvinum. Ad . 

Memoriae Matris Sacrum . 

Method, The .... 

Misery 

Monuments. Church 

Mortification 

Mundis et Mundanis, De 

3Iusic, Church 

Musica Sacra, De . 

Natales et Pascha Concurrentes 

Nature 

Naunton, R., Letters to 497, 499, 

Obedience 

Odor, The 

Offering. An . . . . 

Oratio domini Georgii Herbert 

— qua Auspicatis simum 
Oratione Dominica. De 
Our Life is hid with Christ in God 
Outlandish Proverbs . 

Paradise 

Paradox. A 

Parentalia 

Parody, A 



131 



591 
) 19 
'489 

26 
240 
126 
134 
141 
198 
209 
154 
574 
561 
168 
307 
582 
2S3 
437 
204 
251 
192 
259 
292 
561 
233 
568 
561 
533 
174 
305 

43 
492 
183 
247 
,233 
208 
218 
573 
567 
179 
220 
572 
275 
146 
577 
533 
203 
189 
148 
187 
572 
149 
569 
589 
127 
503 
194 
277 
245 
531 
517 
572 
172 
437 
222 
308 
536 
287 



uiddity, The 
Quip. The -. 
Redemption 
Repentance . 
Reprisal. The . 
Rituum Usu, De . 
Roma dabit or&n 
Rose. The 
Sacrifice. The . 
Scotiam Protrepticon ad Pacem, 

Ad ... . 
Search. The . 
Seductos Innocentes, Ad 
Self-Condemnation 
Sepulcher .... 
Seren. Regem.. Ad 
Sighs and Groans . 
Signaculo Crucis, De . 

Sin 

Sinner, The . 

Sins Round 

Sion .... 

Size. The .... 

Son. The 

Sonnets : Mother, j. o his 

— Sinner, Tiie 

Star. The .... 

Storm, The . 

Submission 

Sunday .... 

Super liminare . 

Superpelliceo, De 

Supplicum Ministrorum raptus 

Temper, The 

Temperance and Sobriety 

Temple, The 

Textore Catharo, De 

Thanksgiving, The 

Time 

Trinity Sunday . 
True Hvmn, A 
Twenty-third Psalm, The 
Ungratefulness 
Unkindness .... 
Valdesso's "Divine Considera 
turns" ..... 
Vanity 

Virtue . . . , . 
Walton. Izaak. Life of Herbert 
Water-Course. The 
Whit-Sunday 
Windows. The . 
World. The . 
Wreath, A 
Zion 



213 

177 



566 



Peace 

Pearl, The . 

Perirrhanteri um 

Pileo Quadrato, De 

Pilgrimage, The 

Posy, Tne . 

Praise 

Prayer . 

Priest to the Temple, A . 

Priesthood. The . 

Proverbs, Outlandish 

Providence . 

Pulley, The 

Purificatioiie post Puerperium, De 564 



244.257 
134,193 

. 311 
. 260 

. 437 



154 
202 
121 
131 
118 
571 
574 
280 
1G7 

576 
262 
577 
272 
122 
579 
169 
563 
147 
119 
209 
197 
234 



119 
159 
222 
184 
160 
106 
565 
574 
138, 139 
419 
89 
567 
116 
210 
152 



274 
168 
182 

405 
173 
176 
19 
271 
142 
151 
170 
289 
197 



171 



Herbert. George. The Flower 



Flo. 531 



219 



Herbert 
Here 



Herbert, George. Gifts of God - - - Fav. 406 

Life of. (Walton.) ----- Her. 19 

Peace - - Fav. 332 

Virtue - Fav. 329 

— H, Letter to Her. 489 

— lady M., To ------- Her. 26 

— c. in The Borderers ----- Wor. 43 

— Sir Walter, c. in Richard iii. - - - Sha. 556 
Herculaneum, Pompeii and - Sch. 225 
Hercules, c. in Prometheus Unbound - - She. 219 

— To fragment of statue of - - . - Rog. 245 
Here all the summer I could stay - - - Keats 262 

— am I Johnny Peep - - - - - Burns 186 

— are old trees, tall oaks ----- Bry. 198 

— are sweet peas, on tip-toe for a flight - Flo. 178 
• — around the ingle bleezing - - - Burns 244 

— awa' there awa' wandering Willie - - Burns 234 

— brewer Gabriel's fire's extinct - - Burns 181 

— bring your wounded hearts - - - Moore 348 

— by this brook we parted - - Ten. 241 

— closed the tenant of that lonely vale - Wor. 633 

— comes the lady ; O so light of foot - - Sha. 725 

— comes the lady; let her witness it - - Sha. 883 

— cursing, swearing, Burton lies - - Burns 180 

— far away, seen from the topmost cliff - Ten. 664 

— free from riot's hated noise - - - - Cow. 497 

— halt we our march, and pitch - - - Bry. 178 

— holy Willie's sair worn clay - - Burns 44 

— I and sorrows sit - Sha. 340 

— I come creeping, everywhere - - - Flo. 415 

— I have a book at last Mer. 217 

— in a little rustic hermitage - Lon. 384 

— in silence the lover f oncdv - Goe. 270 

— interposing, as the godaess paused - - Tho. 292 

— is one leaf reserved for me - - - Moore 75 

— is the glen, and here is the bower - Burns 262 

— is the place, right over the hill - - - Whi. 226 

— is the wood that freshened to her song - Mer. 237 

— it is here. The close of the year - - Ten. 488 

— Johnson lies, a sage by ail allowed - - Cow. -437 

— lie Willie Michie's banes - Burns 179 

— lies a man cut off by fate - Sch. 301 

— lies a mock marquis ----- Burns 180 

— lies a rose, a budding rose - - - Burns 184 

— lies Factotum Ned at last - Moore 608 

— lies John Bushby, honest man - - Burns 187 

— lies Johnny Pigeon - - - - - Burns 176 

— lies lord Coningsby — be civil - - - Pope 349 

— lies Ned Purdon, from misery freed- - Gol. 137 

— lies now a prey to insulting neglect - Burns 182 



Here 
He's 



220 



Here lies old Hobson ; death hath broke - Mil. 419 

— lies one who never drew ... - Cow. 493 

— lies the gentle humorist, who died - - Lon. 380 

— lies the volume thou boldly hast sought - Scott 426 

— lies whom hound did ne'er pursue - - Cow. 413 

— lies with death auld Grizzel Grim - Burns 180 

— lieth one, who did most truly prove - Mil. 420 

— lieth one whose name was writ on water - She. 507 

— man more purely lives, less oft doth fall Wor. 363 

— Martin lies. In manhood's early bloom - Mac. 149 

— meet together the pre-figuring day - - Eos. 156 

— melting mixed with air the ideal forms - Tho. 230 

— my dear friend, is a new book - - - She. 466 

— on our native soil, we breathe once more - Wor. 271 

— on their knees men swore, the stones were Wor. 407 

— once my step was quickened - - - Low. 353 

— pause : the poet claims at least - - - Wor. 282 

— recline you, gentle maid - - - Moore 32 

— rests a woman, good without pretence - Pope 345 

— rests his head upon the lap of earth - - Fav. 34 

— shunning idleness at once - Pope 396 

— sleeps Anacreon, in this ivied shade - Moore 61 

— sleeps the bard ! - - - - - - Moore 535 

— souter Hood in death does sleep - - Burns 185 

— stood an oak, that long had borne - - Wor. 389 

— stopped by hasty death Alexis lies - - Pope 368 

— Stuarts once in glory reign'd - - - Burns 178 

— sweep these foolish leaves away - - - Hoi. 182 

— take my heart, 'twill be safe - - - Moore 655 

— the free spirit of mankind, at length - - Bry. 20 

— the Magian his urn, full of perfume - - Moore 462 

— then we calmly rest ----- Wes. 75 

— this rose. (This one half -blown.) - - Flo. 135 

— warlike cobblers railed from tops - - Mac. 205 

— we dwell in holiest bowers - - - Moore 240 

— where, of havoc tired and rash - - - Wor. 251 

— where the roses blossom, where vines - Goe. 268 

— where the Scottish muse immortal lives Burns 144 

— while the loom of winter weaves - - Whi. 199 

— while the moonlight dun - - - Moore 667 

— will I make my home - Bry. 94 

— Withers, rest ! thou bravest - - - - Pope 346 

— would I wish to sleep ----- White 40 

— young Narcissus o'er the fountain stood - Flo. 51 
Hereditary bondsmen ! know ye not - - Byron 299 
Hereford, Duke of, c. in Eichard ii. - - Sha. 356 
Here's a bottle and an honest friend - - Burns 188 

— a choice set of tools for you - - - Moore 334 

— a health to ane I lo'e dear ! Burns 287 

— a health to my true love," Eemarks on Burns 321 



Here oq-i 

He's ^J- 

Here's a health to them that's awa' - - Burns 249 

— a health in water — a song - - - Burns 273 

— metal more attractive - - - - Sha. 828 

— the bower - - -,. - - Moore 648 

— the old cruiser, twenty-nine - Hoi. 225 

— to the hero of Moultrie Fav. 132 

— to thy health, my bonny lass - - - Burns 261 

Heritage, The - Low. 15 

Herman, c. in Manfred ----- Byron 87 

Hermann. (Hermann and Dorothea, ii.) - Goe. 296 

— and Dorothea - Goe. 289 

Hermes, c. in Masque of Pandora - - - Lon. 342 

— c. in Prometheus Bound - - - - Bro. 115 

— Trismegistus ------- Lon. 402 

Hermia, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 161 

Hermione - Erne. 89 

— c. in Winter's Tale ----- Sha. 304 
Hermit of the Thebaid, The - Whi. 185 

— The - Burns 105; Gol. 103 

Hermitage, In a - - - - - - - Hem. 330 

— Inscription for a - - - - - - Cow. 496 

Hermit's cell, Inscriptions found near - - Wor. 468 

Hermocratia, On ------ Cow. 519 

Hermotimus ------- Ayt. 169 

Hernandez, c. in Siege of Valencia - - Hem. 434 

Hernando, c. in Spanish Gypsy - - - Eliot 266 

Hero- -------- Wil. 309 

— c. in Much Ado about Nothing - - - Sha. Ill 

— and Leander - Hood 55 ; Sen. 145 

— The - - - - - - - - -Whi. 193 

— to Leander ------- Ten. 467 

Herod's lament for Mariamne - - - Byron 194 

Heroes and kings ! your distance keep - Pope 349 

Heroism ----- Cow. 404; Erne. 231 

Heron, Mr. , Letter to Burns 505 

Heron election ballads - - - Burns 279 

Herons of Elmwood Lon. 372 

Hero's death, The Hem. 337 

— lamp — a sonnet - Eos. 270 

Herrick, Robert. Blossoms - - Fav. 328; Flo. 34 

Corinna to go a-Maying - - - Flo. 455 

Daffodils Fav. 419 ; Flo. 36 

Gather ye rose-buds - Flo. 107 

Naming of the wall-flower - - - Flo. 86 

Primroses ------ Flo. 66 

Willow-tree, To a - - - - - Flo. 144 

Her's is a spirit deep and crystal clear - Low. 3 

Hersell pe Highland shentleman - - Burns 301 

Herz Blume, Die. (Hood.) - Flo. 71 

He's armed without that's innocent - - - Pope 290 



He's 
His 



222 



He's not the happy man, to whom is given Tho. 414 

Hesiod, Paraphrase on Bro. 176 

Hesperides, The - - - - - - Ten. 478 

Hesperus, Wreck of the - - - Lon. 27 ; Fav. 412 

Het inimicitias quoties par it semula - - Cow. 435 

Heu quam perpetuis erroribus acta - - - Mil. 543 

— quam remotus vescor ab omnibus - - Low. 51 
Hey for a lass wi' a tocher - - - Burns 287 

— the dusty miller ------ Burns 215 

— tutti taiti, " Eemark on - - - - Burns 321 
Heyne's Virgil, On receiving - - - Cow. 505 

Hiawatha, Song of Lon. 141 

Hiawatha's wooing - - - - Lon. 162; Fav. 45 

Hie etiam jacet ------- Cow. 414 

— jacet immiti consumptus - Pope 368 

— sepultus est Cow. 431 

— sinu fessuni caput hospitali - - - She. 554 

— sita f ceminei laus et victoria - - - Her. 545 

Hidallan, c. in Comala Oss. 203 

Hidden life, The ------ - Cow. 82 

— The - P. of F. 142 

Hide for a night, thy horn, good moon - - Mer. 237 

Higden, Henry, To - Dry. 280 

Higgins, Mrs. M. , Epitaph on - - - - Cow. 483 

High bliss is only for a higher state - - Wor. 133 

— deeds achieved of knightly fame - - - Scott 420 

— deeds, O Germans, are to come from you Wor. 277 

— grace, the dower of queens - - - - Eos. 242 

— in the breathless hall the minstrel sat - Wor. 186 

— in the midst surrounded by his peers - Byron 153 

— is our calling, friend ! Wor. 234 

— on a broad unfertile tract - - - Wor. 89 

— on a throne of a royal state - - - Mil. 36 

— on her speculative tower - Wor. 300 

— on their turreted cliffs -'---. Lon. 348 

— price of fish, On the ----- Cow. 398 

— priest of Apollo to virgin of Delphi - - Moore 190 

— tide on coast of Lincolnshire - - - Ing. Ill 

— was her heart, and yet was well - - Erne. 238 

Higher pantheism, The Ten. 444 

Highest, The Sch. 249 

Highland brooch, The — a sonnet - - - Wor. 386 

— character, The," Remarks on - - - Burns 327 

— chief in Waverley Hem. 334 

— girl, To a Wor. 254 

— hut — a sonnet Wor. 386 

— laddie — a song - - * - - - Burns 274, 301 

— lassie — a song Burns 199 

— Mary — a song Burns 242 

— queen," Remarks on Burns 293 



223 



He's 
His 



Highland society, For the - - - - Cam. 172 

— welcome, The Burns 178 

— widow's lament — a song - - Burns 275 
Highlands of Scotland, In the - Eog. 247 
Hikmet Nameh. (Divan, vi.) - - - Goe. 368 
Hildebrand, c. in Auchindrane - - - Scott 494 
Hill, Joseph, Epistle to - - - - - Cow. 427 

— Peter, Letters to, Burns 410, 419, 432, 451, 454, 462, 475 

— summit — a sonnet Eos. 261 

— top - - - - Whi. 140 

Hills of Annesley, bleak and barren - - Byron 139 

— peep o'er hills, and Alps - Pope 46 
Himerides nymphse (nam vos et Daphne - Mil. 553 
Himself and us, He cannot save - - - Wes. 298 

— Poem on Cow. 2Q 

Hind and the panther, The - Dry. 193 

Hinda, c. in the Spanish Gypsy - - - Eliot 283 

Hint from the mountains Wor. 150 

Hints, prayers, etc. ------ White 205 

— for the fancy — a sonnet ... - Wor. 329 
Hinxham, Miss. Breeze in the church - Fav. 300 
Hippolvta, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 161 
Hirlas horn, The ------ Hem. 241 

His ancient, trusty, drouthy crony - - Burns 131 

— birthday. Nay, we need not speak - - Hoi. 150 

— bow and dart bearing, and torch - - - Goe. 405 

— can't be wrong, whose life is in the right Pope 209 

— eyes in eclipse ------- Ten. 465 

— face was like a snake's — a fragment - She. 507 

— garment was every dele - Flo. 155 

— glory, by whose might all things - - Dante 242 

— heart and hand both open - Sha. 645 

— heart's pure planet shining yet - Moore 456 

— instant thought a poet spoke - Erne. 277 

— jaws uplifting from their fell repast - - Dante 113 

— life at end, life's prison is broken - - Arn. 159 

— life was gentle and the elements - - Sha. 787 

— little, nameless, unremembered acts - - Wor. 188 

— mother's service to our lady - - - Ros. 138 

— nature is too noble for the world - - - Sha. 671 

— nose was as sharp as a pen - - - Sha. 446 

— not to rest, while his the strength - - Rog. 342 
■— only spell-word, Liberty ! - Moore 435 

— only talisman, the Sword - - - Moore 435 

— reasons are as two grains - - - - Sha. 182 

— simple truths did Andrew glean - - - Wor. 143 

— smile was like the incarnation - - - Wil. 33 

— soul fared forth (as from the deep - - Ros. 295 

— soul, proud science never taught - - Pope 189 

— strength in his obedience lay - - - Wes. 261 



His 
Holmes 



224 



His words seemed oracles 
Hitchins, Samuel, Death of 
Hither, Flora, queen of flowers ! 

— gentle muse of mine 

— Venus ! queen of kisses 



- Fav. 
- Wes. 

- Moore 
Moore 

- Moore 
we come — a song - Scott 



Hive at Gettysburg, The -....-- Whi. 
Ho, Moeris ! whither on thy way so fast - - Vir. 

— sire ! " quod the night ----- Cha. 

— swain ! what shepherd owns those - - Vir. 

— trumpets, sound a war-note - - - Mac. 

— workers of the old time - - - . - - Whi. 
Hoarded joy — a sonnet ----- Ros. 

Hob Hattely, c. in Halidon Hill - - - Scott 
Hobynoll. To the learned shepherd - - Spe. 
Hoc, Genitrix, scriptum proles tibi sedula - Her. 
Hockheim, Germans on heights of - - Wor. 
Hoddesdon, To his friend ----- Dry. 

Hofer, Andreas — a sonnet -'--.- Wor. 

Hoffman. Withering — withering - - Flo. 
Hogg, James, Death of Wor. 

Hohenlinden ------- Cam. 

Hoi reontez -------- Ten. 

Hold as 'twere the mirror up - - - - Sha. 

— fast, The -------- Her. 

— ma'am, your pardon ----- Gol. 

— me locks securely caught - Goe. 

— prompter, hold ! a word before - - - Gol. 
Holdfast, c. in Faust ------ Faust 

Holidays -------- Erne. 

— a sonnet - - Lon. 

Holiness — Book i. of Faery Queen - - Spe. 

— on the head ------- Her. 

Holland, Lady, To ----- Moore 

- Sha. 
Mer. 



Holland, John, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2. 
Holland, In 



Holly, Poesy of the Flo. 

— The. (Eliza Cook.) Flo. 

— tree, The. (Southey.) ----- Flo. 
Hollyhock, Poesy of the - - - - - Flo. 
HOLMES, OLIVER WENDELL, Poems of: 



Ad amicos 23-3 

Additional Poems . . 27, 293 

Address for Opening of Fif vh Ave. 

Theater 277 

JEneid, Translation from the . 320 

^Estivation 171 

After-dinner Poem— Terpsichore 64 

— a lecture on John Keats . . 129 

— a lecture on Thomas Moore . 128 

— a lecture on P. B. Shelley . 129 

— a lecture on Wm. Wordsworth 127 

— the Fire 240 



171 
147 

327 

59 

39 

495 

352 

46 

476 

20 

64 

113 

267 

462 

24 

543 

284 

22 

278 

196 

497 

150 

475 

827 

240 

144 

374 

149 

170 

119 

385 

29 

276 

597 

496 

255 

202 

204 

202 

93 



Agassiz, Louis. Farewell to . . 294 

Agnes 89 

Album verses 169 

Alexis. Grand-duke, At Banquet 

to 256 

— Grand-duke, Welcome to . 255 

All here, 1867 222 

Alone 194 

Ambition 188 

America to Russia — a welcome 255 
American Med. Assoc. For meet- 
ing of 132 



225 



His 
Holmes 



Andrew, Gov., For Inauguration 

of Statue of . . . .298 
Appeal for the "Old South" . 811 

Army Hymn 155 

Atlantic Dinner, At the . . 296 

AuntTabitha 187 

Autocrat of Breakfast-Table, Po- 
ems from . . .161 

Avis 142 

Bachelor's Private Journal. From 78 
Ballad of the Boston Tea-party 24? 

— of the Oysterman . . .83 
Banker's Dinner, The . . 11 1 
Banquet to Chinese Embassy, At 

the, 1868 257 

— to Grand-duke Alexis, At the 256 

— to Japanese Embassy. At the 

1872 258 

Bells, The 102 

Berkshire Festival, Lines at the 35 

— Horticultural Society, For Meet- 

ing of . . . . 134 

Bill and Joe 207 

Birthday Festival to J. R. Lowell 144 

— of Daniel Webster . . .139 

— tribute to J. Freeman Clarke 144 
Blank Sheet of Paper, To a . 81 
Boston Common— Three pictures 151 

— Pier,— Centennial dinner, 1873 287 

— Tea-party, Ballad of the . 247 

Boys, The 213 

Breakfast-Table Series, Epilogue 

to 205 

Bric-a-brac Club, For the— "The 

First Fan " . . . .312 
Brother Jonathan's Lament for 

Sister Caroline . . .153 
Bryant, W. C. , Seventieth birth- 
day of . 259 
Bunker Hill, Story of . 300 
Burns Centenary, For the, 1859 . 150 

— Club, For meeting of . . 137 

C.,F. W., 1864 218 

Caged Lion, To a . . . 75 
Cambridge Churchyard, The . 2 

— Old (Mass.) . . 304 
Canaan, To— a Puritan War-song 250 
Centenary of Bums . . .150 

— of Harvard, Song for . . 32 

— of Humboldt . . . .272 
Centennial Dinner of Proprietors 

of Boston Pier, For . . 287 

— Welcome to the Nations, 1876 306 
Chambered Nautilus, The . . 161 
Chanson without music . . 286 
Chicago Fair, Hymn for the . 253 
Chinese Embassy, At Banquet to 257 
Choose you this Day . . .217 
Clarke, James Freeman, Birthday 

tribute to . . . .144 
Class of 1829, Hymn for meeting 

of, in 1868 . . . .227 

Meeting of 1875 . . . 235 

Poems of 207 

Clerk, Lines by a ... 80 
Close of a Course of Lectures. At 

the . . . . . 130 
Collins, Wilkie, Toast for . . 263 

Comet, The 9 

Commemoration Services, For, 

1865 266 

13 



Conquest, The (Agnes.) . . 92 

Contentment 170 

Crooked Footpath, The . . 178 

Daily Trials 6 

Deacon's Masterpiece, The . . 172 
Dedication of Halleck Monument 274 

— of Pittsfield Cemetery . „ 123 
Departed Days .... 33 
De Sauty— an electro-chemical 

eclogue .... 182 
Dickens, Charles, Song for din- 
ner to 34 

Dilemma, The 4 

Dinner to Admiral Farragut, At a 262 

— to General Grant, At a . 261 
Disappointed Statesman, The . 120 
Divine Voice, The . . . .185 
Dorchester Giant, The . . 7 
Dorothy Q.— a family portrait . 243 
Earlier Poems .... 1 
Ehrenberg, Christian G., To . 264 
Emancipation Proclamation, 

Hymn after the . . . 253 
English Friend, To an . . 126 
Epilogue to Breakfast Table Se- 
ries 205 

Epitaphs: Malcolm, Capt. Daniel 322 

Even-Song 227 

Evening, by a Tailor ... 6 

— Thought, An. (Written at Sea.) 85 
Everett, Edward—" Our First Cit- 
izen" 268 

Extracts from Medical Poem . 45 

F. W. C, 1804 218 

Fair at Chicago, Hymn for the . 253 
Familiar Letter, A . . . . 306. 
Family Record, A 315 

Fantasia 187 

Farewell, Songs of 255 

— to Louis Agassiz . . . 294 

— to H. W. Longfellow . . 263 

— to James Russell Lowell . . 137 
Farragut, Admiral, At dinner 

to 262 

Fifth Avenue Theater, For open- 
ing of 277 

First Fan, The 312 

— Verses— Translation from the 

JEneid 320 

Flower of Liberty, The . . 156 
Fountain of Youth, The . . 289 
Freedom our Queen . . .155 
Friends, At a meeting of . . 293 
God save the Flag! . . .252 
Good Time Going, A . . .169 
Governor W. W. Swain, To . 125 
Grandmother's Story of Bunker 

Hill Battle . ' . . .300 
Grant, Ulysses S., At dinner to . 261 
Gray Chief, The .... 145 

Grisette, La 7'8 

H. C. M.,— II . S..— J. K. W. . 232 
Halleck, Fitz-Creene, Dedication 

of monument to . . 274 
Harvard Alumni Meeting, 1857, 

For 147 

— Centenary, 1830 .... 32 

— Memorial Hall, For dedication 

of 275 

— Memorial Hall, For Laying Cor- 

ner-stone of . , . , 274 



Holmes 



226 



Hayes, President R. B., at a din- 
ner, To 314 

Height of the Ridiculous . . 12 
Homesick in Heaven . . . 185 
Hornet, Wasp and the . . 86 
Hot Season, The .... 84 
How not to settle it . . . 237 

— the Old Horse won the bet . 309 
Howe, Dr. Samuel G., In memory 

of '.299 

Hudson River. The . . .131 
Humboldt, Baron von, Centenary 

of 272 

Hymn after Emancipation Proc- 
lamation .... 253 

— at Funeral of Charles Sumner 275 

— for Chicago Fair . . . 253 

— for Class-meeting, I860 . . 227 

— of Peace, A .... 290 

— of Trust 177 

Idols 201 

Illustration of a picture . . 77 
I'm ashamed— that's the fact . 214 
Impromptu, An .... 209 
In the Quiet Days . . .243 

In War-Time 250 

Inconnue, L' .... 79 
Indian Summer, Our . . .211 
Insect, To an .... 3 
International Ode . . . .152 
Intra Muros. (Spring has come.) 165 

Iris, her Book 179 

Island Hunting-song, The . . 33 

— Ruin, The 108 

J. D.R.,1862 215 

J. K. W., In memory of . .232 
Japanese Embassy, At Banquet 

to the, 1872 . . . .258 
Keats, John. After Lecture on . 129 
Knight. The. (Agnes.) ... 89 

LaGvisette 78 

Last Blossom, The . . . .170 

— Charge, The .... 219 

— Leaf, The 1 

— Look, The. (W.W. Swain.) . 145 

— Reader, The . . . .12 
Latter-day Warnings . . .168 
Lending a Punch-bowl, On . .33 
Lexington (Mass.) ... 29 
Liberty, Union and . . .158 
Lincoln, Abraham, For Services 

in memory of 266 

L 'Inconnue 79 

Lines by a Clerk . . . .80 
Living Temple, The . . . 143 
Longfellow, Henry W., Farewell 
' to, 1868 .... 263 

Love 203 

Lowell, James Russell, Birthday 

festival to . . .144 

Farewell to . . . .137 

Lucy,— for her golden wedding . 298 
M., H. C, In memory of . .232 
Maiden, The. (, Agnes.) ... 90 
Malcolm, Capt. Daniel, Epitaph 

to 322 

Manhood 196 

Mare Rubrum 212 

Martha, Death of 146 
Massachusetts Med. Soc, For the 145 
Society, For dinner of, 1870 280 



Master anr? Scholar 

Mathematical Story, L . , i;4 

Meeting of American M^aioa . A* 

sociation .... 132 

— of Burns' Club, For . , .137 

— ot Friends, At a . .293 

— - of Harvard Alumni, WJ? . . 147 

— of National Sanitary Associa- 

tion 149 

— - of the Dryads, The ... 71 
Memorial tribute to Dr. S, G. 

Howe 299 

— Verses 266 

Midsummer . . . . . 182 
Mind's Diet, The . . . .105 
Miscellaneous Poems ... 71 
Modest Request, A . . . .39 
Moore, Thomas, After Lecture on 128 
Moral Bully, The . . . . 103 
Mother's Secret, A . . . . 117 
Motley, John Lothrop, Parting to 164 

Musa 163 

Music-grinders, The ... 9 
My Annual 221 

— Aunt 4 

Mvsterious Illness, The . . . 115 

— Visitor, The .... 72 
National Sanitary Association, 

For meeting of . . . 149 
Nearing the Snow-line . . . 248 
Never or now— an appeal . . 251 
New Eden, The . . . .134 

— England Society, Semi-centen- 

nial of 136 

Nightmare dream by Daylight . 151 
Non-Resistance .... 103 
Noontide Lyric, A ... 84 
Notes to poems . . . .321 
; Nux Postcoenatica ... 36 
j Ode for a Social meeting . . 176 

— for Washington's Birthday . 138 
Old Cambridge (Mass.) . . 304 

— Cruiser, The .... 225 

— Ironsides ..... 1 

— Man Dreams, The . . .210 

— Man of the Sea, The . . .151 

— Player, The .... 105 

— South Church, Appeal for . 311 

— year Long, An .... 243 

Once more 223 

One Country .... 252 

— Hoss Shay, The . . . .172 
Only Daughter, The . . . a3 
Opening of the Piano, The . . 181 

— the Window .... 241 
Organ-blower, The .... 245 
Our Banker 233 

— Father's Land . . . .152 

— First Citizen— Edward Everett 268 

— Indian Summer . . . .211 

— Limitations .... 105 

— Oldest Friend . . . .220 

— Sweet Singer.— J. A. . . 23i 

— Yankee Girls .... 79 
Oysterman, Ballad of the . . 83 
Pantomime, At the . . . 245 
Parson Turell's Legacy . . 174 
Parting Health of J. L. Motley 164 

— Hymn 156 

— Song— Festival of Alumni, 1857 148 
-Word. The 4G 



227 



Holmes 



Peace Jubilee, 1869, Hymn for . 
Phi Beta Kappa, June, 1873 . 

Kappa Society, For the . 

Philosopher to his love, The . 
Pictures from Occasional Poems 
Pilgrim's Vision, The . 
Pittsfield Cemetery, Dedication 

of 

Plowman, The 

Poem served to order, A . 
Poet at Breakfast-table, Poems 

from 

Poetry— a metrical essay 
Poet's Lot, The .... 
Pox-trait, A 

— of a Gentleman, To the . 

— of a Lady, To the 
President's Old Arm-chair, The 
Professor at Breakfast Table, Po- 
ems from .... 

Programme 

Prologue 

Promise, The 

Proud Pedestrian, Reflections of i 
Puritan War-song— To Canaan . 
Questioning . . 
Questions and Answers . 

Qui Vive ! 

R.; J. D., 1862 

Readers, To my .... 
Reflections of a Proud Pedestrian 

Regrets 

Remember— forget 
Rescue, The. (Agnes.) . 
Reward, The " . 
Rhymed Lesson, A 
Rhymes of an Hour 

Rights 

Rip Van Winkle, M.D. - 
Robinson of Leyden . 
Roman Aqueduct, A 
S. ; H., In memory of . 
Saint Anthony, Temptation of . 
Sea Dialogue, A . 
Secret of the Stars, The 
Semi-centennial of New England 

Society 

Sentiment, A 48, 

September Gale, The . 
Shakespeare, Tercentenary of 
Shelley, Percy B., After Lecture 

on ........ 

Sherman's in Savannah 
Ship of State, The 
Smiling Listener, The . 
Social Meeting, Ode for a . 
Song for dinner to Chas. Dickens 

— for Harvard Centenary, 1836 

— for Temperance Dinner, 1842 

— of Other Days, A 

— of Twenty-nine 

— in Many Keys .... 
Songs of Many Seasons 



123 



Songs of Welcome and Farewell 255 
Specter Pig, The .... 74 
Spring 99 

— has come 165 

Stability of Science . . .45 
Star and the Water-lily . . 76 
Stars, Secret of the 121 

Steamboat, The .... 29 
Stethoscope Song, The . . .43 
Strange that one lightly whis- 
pered tone . . . .80 

Study. The 100 

Sumner, Charles, For funeral serv- 
ices of 275 

Sun and Shadow . . . .162 
Sun-day Hymn, A . . .178 
Swain, W. W. The Last Look . 145 

— Governor W. W., To . .125 
Sweet Little Man, The . . .157 

Sympathies 191 

Teetotaler, Ode altered by a . 17G 
Tercentenary of Shakespeare . 270 
Terpsichore, an after-dinner poem 64 
Thus saith the Lord . . .251 
Toadstool, The .... 73 
Toast to Wilkie Collins . . .263 
Treadmill Song, The ... 10 

Truths 200 

Two Armies, The . . .162 

— Streams, the . . . .141 
Under the Violets . . .177 

— Washington Elm, Cambridge . 154 
Union and Liberty . . .158 

Unsatisfied 308 

Upham, C. W., Jr., In Memory of 146 

Urania 49 

Verses for After-dinner. 1844 . 38 

Vignettes 127 

Vive La France ! . . . .153 
Voice of the Loyal North . . 215 
Voiceless, The. . . 141 
Voyage of the Good Ship Union . 216 
Ware, John and Robert, In mem- 
ory of 271 

Warren, Joseph, M.D. . . 300 
Washington Elm, Under the . 154 
Washington's Birthday, Ode for 138 
Wasp and the Hornet, The . 
Water-lily. Star and the . 
Webster, Daniel, Birthday of 
Welcome, Songs of . 

— to Grand-duke Alexis . 

— to the Nations. 1876 . 
What I have come for 

— we all think . 
Wind-clouds and Star-drifts 
Wonderful One-hoss shay, The , 
Wordsworth, Wm., After lecture 

on 

Worship 

Young Astronomer's Poem, from 

the 

— Girl's Poems, The 



Holmes, Oliver Wendell. Chambered nautilus Fav. 

God bless our Fatherland - - - Fav. 

Illustration of a picture - - - Fav. 

Lending a punch-bowl ... - p a v. 

Pimpernel Flo. 



86 
76 
139 
255 
255 
306 
233 
165 
188 
172 

127 

195 

188 
187 

425 

271 

293 
104 

77 



Ilolmes 
Hood 



228 



Holmes, Oliver Wendell. Poesy - - - Fav. 322 

Spanish girl in reverie - Fav. 293 

Star and water-lily - - - Flo. 164, 377 

Holofernes, c. in Love's Labor's Lost - - Sha. 135 

Holy Alliance, Tables for the - - - Moore 568 

— and heavenly spirits — a sonnet - - Wor. 370 

— baptism Her. 126 

— be the pilgrim's sleep ----- - Moore 648 

— communion - - Her. 134 

— divine, good, amiable or sweet - Mil. 215 

— fair, The - - Burns 86 

— family, For— a sonnet - - - - Eos. 293 

— Ghost, we know thou art - - - Wes. 303 

— grail, The - - Ten. 397, 405 

— land, The. (From Lamartine.) - - - Whi. 81 

— Lord God ! I love thy truth - - Cow. 88 

— One, The - - - - ~ •• - P. of F. 22 

— Scriptures. The - - - - -• Her. 141 

— Willie, Epitaph on - - - - Burns 44 

— Willie's prayer - - - - -. - Burns 43 
Home - - - Her. 198; (Montgomery.) Fav. 337 

— at last Pro. 188 

— ballads - Whi. 218 

— keeping youth have ever - Sha. 21 

— of our childhood ! how affection clings - Hoi. 17 

— Spells of ------- Hem. 423 

— they brought her warrior dead - - Ten. 163 

— they brought him slain --...- Ten. 392 

— to rest in. (Morford.) ----- Fav. 265 
Homeless - Pro. 441 

— poor, The Pro. 407 

HOMER, Iliad of: 



Achilles and Agamemnon, Con 

tention of . 
Reconciliation of . 

— Grief of . 

— Shield of, described . 
Ajax, Acts of 
Battle of the gods . 

— of the Grecian Wall 
Breach of Truce and First Battle 
Catalogue of the Forces 

— of the Ships 
Description of the Shield 
Diomed, Acts of . 
Duel of Menelaus and Paris . 
Embassy to Achilles . 
Glaucus and Diomed, Episodes of 
Hector and Ajax, Combat of . 

— and Andromache, Episodes of 

— Death of 

HOMER, Odyssey of: 



Adventures of the Cicons 
Aeolus, Adventures with 
Alcinous, Court of 
Bending of Ulysses* Bow 



121 
. 136 



292 



I Juno receives Jupiter . . . 297 
Menelaus, Acts of 357 

— and Paris. Duel of . . .97 
I Night Adventure of Diomed and 

Ulvsses . . . . . 222 
Patroclus, Death of . . .333 

— Games in honor of . . . 451 
Pope's Preface to the Iliad . 30 
Reconciliation of Achilles and 

Agamemnon . . . 394 
Redemption of Hector's body . 476 
Scamander, River, Battle in . 419 

Second Battle 184 

I Seventh Battle . . . .357 

Shield of Achilles described . 389 

I Ships, Catalogue of the . . 85 

i Sixth Battle 333 

| Third Battle 238 

i Trial of the Army . . . .70 



Charybdis, Sirens, Scylla and . 172 

Cicons, Adventures of the . . 121 

Conference with Menelaus . 47 

Council of Ithaca . . . .21 



229 



Holmes 
Hood 



Interview of Telemachus and N< 

tor 

Irus and Ulysses, Fight of . 
Ithaca, Minerva's Descent to 
Scylla and Charybdis . 
Suitors, Death of the . 
Telemachus, Return of . 
Ulysses, Arrival of, in Ithaca . 

- She. 



Death of the Suitors, The . . 303 
Departure of Ulysses from Ca- 
lypso 72 

Descent into Hell . . . .152 
Discovery of Ulysses to Euryclea 264 

— of Ulysses to Telemachus . 225 
Eumseus, Conversation with . 197 
Euryclea, Discovery of Ulysses to 264 

Homer, Hymns of 

— Inscribed on bust of Cow. 

— Mistake in translating -"-.'- Cow. 

— Neglect of - Cow. 

— Paraphrases on - Bro. 

Homerides, The Sch. 

Homer's Odyssey, Fifth book of Bry. 

Homes of England Hem. 

Homesick Col. 

— in heaven - Hoi. 

Homesickness - Pro. 

Homeward bound ------ Pro. 

— we turn — a sonnet ------ Wor. 

Homunculus, c. in Faust -.-■-'- Faust 
Honest man's the noblest work of God - - Pope 

— tale speeds best being plainly told - - Sha. 

— Will's to heaven gane - - - - Burns 
Honesty (lxv.) — fragment - She. 
Honey -flowers to the honey-comb - - - Ros. 

— from silkworms who can gather - - She. 
Honeysuckle, Poesy of the -..'-'- Flo. 

— The - - - -Ros. 151; (Bleesington.) Flo. 
Honeysuckles. (Keats.) ----- Flo. 
Honey wood, Mr., c. in Good-natured Man - Gol. 
Honor — a sonnet Wor. 

— and happiness unite ----- Cow. 

— and shame from no condition rise - - Pope 

— dominion, glory and renown - - - Mil. 

— is a mere scutcheon Sha. 

— is the subject of my story - Sha. 

— pricks me on ------ - Sha. 

— riches, marriage-blessing - Sha. 

Honorable, The - - Sch. 

Honorer, The - P. of F. 

Honors- ------ Ing. 13; Sch. 

HOOD, THOMAS, Poems of: 



32 

. 253 

7 

. 172 

303 
. 211 

185 

509 

496 
487 
486 
177 
268 
282 
385 
163 
185 
163 

53 
407 
170 
217 
584 
187 
505 
282 
409 
131 
132 
137 
177 
279 

84 
215 
145 
405 
766 
405 

15 
259 

65 
248 



Absentee, To an . 
Art, Progress of . 
As it fell upon a day 
Autumn— a poem 

— an ode . 

— is old . 

Bachelor's Dream . 
Backing the Favorite 
Bianca's Dream 
Black Job, A 
Bow-legs, Sailor's apology for 



153 
378 
533 
147 
142 
159 
371 
533 
330 
407 



Bridge of Sighs .... 119 

Broken Dish 458 

Burning of the Love-letter . 588 

Butcher, A 568 

By every sweet tradition — a son- 
net 166 

Careless Nurse Mayd . . . 345 
Celebration of Peace . . . 354 
Child embracing his mother, To a 171 
Civilization, Recipe for . . . 520 
Clapham Academy, Ode on . 449 



Hood 
Horn 


230 


- 


Cold Beauty, To a . 


. 147 


Mary's Ghost .... 


599 


Coleridge. S. T., Sonnet to 


54 


Melancholy, Ode to 


. 160 


Conveyancing . 


. 582 


Mermaid of Margate . 


534 


Craniology .... 


. 554 


Midsummer Fairies, Plea of the 


. 15 


Cross of St. Paul's . 


. 516 


Miss Kilmansegg and her pre- 


Curse of Adam— a sonnet . 


. 167 


cious leg .... 


. 187 


Daughter. To my, on her birthday 171 


Monkey Martyr. The . 


549 


Death-bed, The . 


. 169 


Moon, Ode to the . 


. 155 


Death's Ramble 


. 376 


Mornins; Meditations . 


289 


December and May . 


. 541 


— Thought, A . 


. 262 


Demon-ship. The . 


. 355 


My heart is sick with longing— a 


Departure of Summer 


. 137 


sonnet .... 


. 182 


Domestic poems 


. 393 


Navarre. Legend of . 


5C3 


Don't you smell fire? . 


. 569 


Nellie Gray, Faithless . 


. 361 


Dream of Eugene Aram . 


. 98 


New Year's Day, On a 


607 


Elm Tree, The . 


82 


No sun— no moon ! 


310 


Enthusiast, Sonnet to an 


. 165 


Number One .... 


. 35,3 


Epicurean Reminiscences 


of a 


O lady leave thy silken thread . 


175 


Sentimentalist . 


. 343 


Ocean, Sonnet to tne 


ieo 


Epping Hunt 


. 481 


Open Question, An . 


. 4C2 


Equestrian Courtship . 


. 401 


Over the Way .... 


329 


Errata, Table of . 


. 430 


Pain in a Pleasure-boat 


. 592 


Etching Moralized . 


. 441 


Parental Ode to my son . 


395 


Evening Bells, Those . 


. 480 


Parthian Glance . 


. 557 


Fairlnes .... 


. 135 


Pawning my Watch, On . 
Peace, Celebration of . 


456 


Faiiy Tale, A 


. 388 


. 354 


Faithless Nelly Gray 


, 361 


— Ode to 


459 


— Sallv Brown . 


. 328 


Perry, Ode to . 


. 346 


Fall of the Deer 


. 540 


Plain Dissecdon, A . . . 


398 


False Friend, To a 


. 173 


Plea of the Midsummer Fairies 


15 


— poets and true— a sonnet 


. 182 


Please to ring the belle " . 


520 


Fancy. Sonnet to . 


. 164 


Poet's Portion, The 


. 174 


Farewell lif e ! my senses swim . 172 


Pompey's Ghost .... 


461 


February the fourteenth— a 


son- 


Progress of Art 


. 378 


net .... 


. 183 


Rae Wilson, Esq., Ode to . 


415 


Flower, The .... 


. 364 


Recipe for Civilization . 


. 520 


Flowers .... 


. 176 


Report from Below . 


601 


Forsaken, The 


. 158 


Retrospective Review . 


. 453 


Gift, On receiving a— a sonnet . 166 


Rondeau 


608 


Good Direction, A 


. 598 


Rotterdam, Lines composed at 


. 325 


Hahnemann. Dr., Ode to 


. 464 


Row at the Oxford Arms . 


434 


Haunted House. The . 


. 106 


Ruth 


. 148 


Hero and Leander . 


. 55 


Sailor's Apology for Bow-legs . 
Saint Cecilia's Eve, Ode for . 


369 


Humorous Poems 


. 187 


469 


Hymenial Retrospections 


. 393 


— Paul's, Cross of 


516 


I love thee — I love thee ! 


. 17S 


Sallv Brown. Faithless . 


. 328 


I remember. I remember the house 1.50 


Sea Spell. The ... . 


364 


I'm not a single man . 


. 584 


Season. The 


327 


Irish Schoolmaster . 


. 316 


Serenades . . . . 17S 


,397 


It is not death— a sonnet . 


. 165 


Shakespeare, Sonnet in a volume 


— was not in the winter 


. 180 


of. . . 


164 


Jack Hall .... 


. 559 


She is far from land 


543 


John Trot— a ballad 


. 579 


She's up and gone 


149 


Kilmansegg, Miss, and her 


pre- 


Sigh on, sad heart— a ballad . 


. 151 


cious leg . 


. 187 


Silence — a sonnet 


167 




Sleeping Child, Sonnet to a . 


183 


India 


. 605 


Song of the Shirt 


123 


Lady's Dream, The 


. 126 


Sonnets : By every sweet tradition 166 


Lake and Fairv-boat 


. 144 


— Coleridge, S. T., To 


54 


Last Man. The . 


525 


— Curse of Adam . 


167 


Lay of the Laborer 


. 132 


— Enthusiast, To an . 


165 


Lear— a sonnet . 


. 181 


— False Poets and true . 


182 


Lee Shore, The 


. 168 


— Fancy, To .... 


164 


Legend of Navarre- 


. 503 


— February fourteenth, For 


183 


Let us make a leap 


. 179 


— It is not death .... 


165 


Literarv and Literal . 


. 594 


— Lear . . . 


181 


Lost Heir, The . 


. 475 


— Love, dearest lady . 


168 


Love 


. 326 


— My heart is sick with longing . 


182 


— and Lunacy . 


. 263 


— Ocean. To the .... 


180 


— dearest Lady— a sonnet . 


. 168 


— Receiving a Gift, On . 


166 


— Lane 


. 391 


— Shakespeare. In a volume of 


164 



231 



Hood 
Horn 



Sonnets: Silence 

— Sleeping Child, To a 

— Sonnet. To a 

— World, is with me, The . 

— Spring 

Spring it is cheery— a ballad . 
Stag-eyed Lady, The 

Stars are with the Voyager 
Still glides the gentle streamlet 

on . . . . 
Sub-marine, The .... 
Summer, Departure of 
Sun. Hymn to the .... 
Table of Errata .... 
Tale of a trumpet . 
Those Evening Bells . 



Tim Turpin . 
Time. Hope and Memory 
Trot. John— a ballad . 
True Story. A 
Turpin. Tim— a ballad . 
Turtles. The— fable 
Valentine, A . 
Volunteer, The . 
Water Lily, The . 
— Peri*s Song, The 
Wee Man, The 
Welcome, dear heart 
Widow. The . 
Winter Noseg-ay, A 
Workhouse Clock, The . 
World is with me— a sonnet 



546 
175 
579 
509 
546 
386 
518 
571 
152 
503 
^374 
157 
575 
542 
129 
184 



Hood, Thomas. Bridge of sighs - - - Fav. 139 

Death-bed, The ----- Fav. 89 

Fairlnes ------- Fav. 162 

1 remember, I remember - - - Fav. 303 

Moon, The ------- Flo. 480 

Rosemary — Die Herz Blume - - Flo. 71 

Sunflower, The Flo. 149 

Time, hope, and memory - Fav. 319 ; Hood 175 

— — To memory of ----- Low. 106 

Une pensee Flo. 163 

Hood, a ruling elder, Epitaph on - - Burns 185 

Hoop, On the Tho. 395 

Hooper, Lucy - Whi. 131 

Hope - - - - Cow. 166: Her. 209; Sch. 221 

— imagination, honorable aims - - - Col. 221 

— like the short-lived ray - Cow. 34 

— love, desire and fear She. 469 

— of an hereafter. (Campbell.) - - - Fav. 205 

— of unknown bliss, and faith - Pope 219 

— overtaken — a sonnet *Ros. 247 

— provides wings to thought - G-oe. 206 

— rules a land forever green - Wor. 202 

— shakes his cap and bells - Rog. 192 

— smiled when your nativity was cast - Wor. 406 

— springs eternal in the human breast - - Pope 189 

— time and memory - - - Hood 175 ; Fav. 319 

— withering fled and mercy sighed - - Byron 30 
Hopes that swell in youthful breasts - - She. 567 

— what are they? — an inscription - - - Wor. 468 
Horace, Fifth ode of - - • - - - Mil. 469 

— Fifth satire of Cow. 524 

— Imitations of Pope 277, 506 

— Ninth satire of Cow. 529 

— Odes of Moore 328, 337 

— Translations from - - - Byron 133 ; Cow. 533 

Horatio, c. in Hamlet Sha. 811 

Horatius Mac. 31 

Horn of Egremont castle - Wor. 455 



Hornbook 9 Q O 

How ^ d - 

Hornbook, Dr., Death and - - Burns 39 

Horner, Thomas, an armorer - - - Sha. 496 

Hornet, Wasp and the ----- Hoi. 86 

Horrible decree, The ----- Wes. 193 

Horse being impounded, On his - - Burns 180 

Hortensio, c. in Taming of the Shrew - - Sha. 229 

Hortensius, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 

Horti, deliciee Dominae marcescite - - Her. 540 

Hosanna sanctus Deus sabaoth - - Dante 263 
Hosea, Hymns on passages in Wes. 57, 290 

Hospital and governors, The - Cra. 425 

Host, where Julia lodges - - . Sha. 21 

Hostage, The - Sen. 155 

Hostel, The. (Marmion.) - Scott 65 

Hostess of Eastcheap tavern - Sha. 439 

Hot season, The Hoi. 84 

Hotspur (Henry Percy), c. in Eichard ii. - Sha. 356 

— (Henry Percy), c. in Henry iv.. pt. 1. - Sha. 382 
Hough, bishop, Epigram to - - - - Pope 398 
Hour of death, The Hem. 358 

— of prayer, The - - - Hem. 361 

— of romance, The Hem. 412 

— when we shall meet again - - - - Col. 61 
Hours - - - p r o. 182 

— of idleness - Byron 130 

House and grounds. (Leigh Hunt.) - - Flo. 343 

— of Aspen — a tragedy Scott 561 

— of clouds ------- Bro. 98 

— of Epimetheus ---.'-■- Lon. 344, 349 

— of life, The— a sonnet ----- Eos. 227 

— of prayer, The Cow. 62 

How absolute the knave is ! - - - - Sha. 841 

— all the other passions fleet to air - - - Sha. 193 

— and the why, The Ten. 462 

— are the mighty fallen - - - . - - Wes. 231 

— art thou named ? - Wor. 243 

— awf ul ! how impressive is this gloom - White 228 

— backward man himself to blame - - Wes. 233 

— beautiful is night. (Southey . ) Fav. 42 

— beautiful is the rain ! - - - Lon. 81 ; Fav. 392 

— beautiful it is ! ------ Wil. 235 

— beautiful it is for man to die - - - Wil. 68 

— beautiful it was, that one bright - - - Lon. 319 

— beautiful when up a lofty height - - Wor. 129 

— beautiful your presence, how benign - - Wor. 358 

— bland and sweet the greeting - - - Whi. 107 

— blessed is he who leads a country life - - Dry. 286 

— blessed the youth whom fate - - - Cow. 31 

— blest has my time been - Burns 300 

— blest that youth whom gentle fate - - Burns 293 



233 



Hornbook 
How 



How blest the maid whose heart - - - Wor. 

— blest thy creature is, O God - - - Cow. 

— bravely Autumn paints upon the sky - - Hood 

— bravely thou becomest thy bed, fresh lily Sha. 

— cabinets are formed and how destroyed - Mac. 

— calm, how beautiful come on - - - Moore 

— can I live without thee? how forego - - Mil. 

— can I then return in happy plight - - Sha. 

— can it be that Brahm would make - - Arn. 

— can my muse want subject to invent - Sha. 

— can my poor heart be glad - Burns 

— can you, my Lord, thus delight - - Moore 

— careful was I when I took my way - - Sha. 

— changingly forever veers - Moore 

— clear, how keen, how marvelously - - Wor. 

— cold are thy baths, Apollo ! Lon. 

— cold is that bosom which folly - - Burns 

— cruel are the parents — a song - - - Burns 

— daur ye ca' me howlet-faced - - - Burns 

— dear the sky has been above this place - Eos. 

— dear to me the hour - - - Moore 

— delicious is the winning ... - Cam. 

— disappeared he? Ask the newt and toad - Wor. 

— do I love thee? Let me count - - - Bro. 

— does nature proceed to unite - - - Sch. 

— dreadful is the sinner's fate - - - Wes. 

— easy is a bush supposed a bear ! - - - Sha. 

— eloquent are eyes ! - - - - - She. 

— fair doth n c ture appear again - - - Goe. 

— far beneath me seems the earthly ball - Sch. 

— fares it with the happy dead - - - Ten. 

— fast the chains of nature bind - - - Wes. 

— fast the Marian death-list - - - Wor. 

— fond the self -deceiver's hope - - - Wes. 

— foolish was my hope and vain - Wes. 



fresh, O Lord, how sweet 



Her. 266; Flo. 



— full of briers is this working-day world - Sha. 

— glorious fall the valiant, sword in hand - Cam. 

— gracefully, O man, with thy palm-bough - Sch. 

— gracious, how benign is solitude - - Wor. 

— grave thou lookest, loved one ! Goe. 

— happens it that thou art sad - - = Goe. 

— happily the flowers die away - - - Flo. 

— happy are the new-born race - - - Cow. 

— happy do I wish thee, and how sweet - Byron 

— happy every child of grace - Wes. 

— happy is the blameless vestal's lot - - Pope 

— has New England's romance fled - - - Whi. 

— he sleepeth, having drunken - - - Bro. 

— heavenly was the poet's doom - - Moore 



301 

81 
164 
952 
189 
444 
215 
1031 

60 
1032 
263 
618 
1034 
663 
236 
396 
142 
285 
182 
301 
220 
241 
387 
164 
264 
296 
176 
571 

49 
275 
190 
114 
369 
269 
135 
531 
209 
127 

85 
526 
215 
56 
271 
625 
256 
376 
114 
127 



How 



234 



How heavy do I journey on the way - 

— I love the festive boy - 

— I started up in the night - 

— idly of the human heart we speak 

— if a' will not stand 

— in the light of morning - 

— index-learning turns no student pale 

— joyously the young sea-mew 

— large that thrush looks -.-.-- 

— lightly mounts the muse's wing - 

— like a mounting devil in the heart - 

— like a winter hath my absence been - 

— like a younker or a prodigal - - ■ - 

— like the starless night of death - 

— Lisa loved the king - 

— long and dreary is the night 

— long, how often shall I pray 

— long, O God, shall men be ridden down 

— long shall this like dying life - 

— long will this harp which you once - 

— long will ye round me be swelling - 

— loved, how honored once, avails thee not 

— lovelily the jasmine flower 

— lovely are thy dwellings fair 

— many a mighty ship ----- 

— many between east and west 

— many bright flowers now around me 

— many hopes were borne upon thy bier 

— many lives, made beautiful and sweet 

— many thousands are wakening now - 

— much a dunce that has been sent 

— much, egregious Moore, are we - 

— much of my young heart, O Spain - 

— much preventing God, how much I owe 

— not to settle it ----- - 

— now, foolish rheum- - 

— now, shepherd, what means that? - 

— oft a cloud with envious vail 

— oft do they their silver bowers leave 

— oft has the Banshee cried 

— oft have I, like Pharaoh proved 

— oft the sight of means - 

— oft, though grass and moss are seen 

— oft when thou, my music play'st - 

— oft when watching stars - 

— plain and height with drops 

— pleasant the banks of the clear-winding - 

— profitless the relics that we cull - 

— pure and frail and white - 

— - pure at heart and sound in head - 



Sha. 1034 

Moore 43 

Lon. 340 

- Wil. 210 
Sha. 123 

- Goe. 179 
Pope 132 

- Bro. 72 
Eos. 299 

Moore 351 
Wil. 200 

- Sha. 1039 
Sha. 188 

- Hoi. 95 
Eliot 73 

Burns 265 
Wes. 57 

- Ten. 481 
Spe. 691 

- Hoi. 221 
Col. 41 

- Pope 92 

Flo. 122 

- Mil. 497 
Pro. 361 

- Cow. 439 

Flo. 91 

- Hem. 224 

Lon. 321 

- Hem. 362 
Cow. Ill 

- Pope 372 
Lon. 373 

- Erne. 299 

Hoi. 237 

- Sha. 346 
Flo. 142 

Moore 73 

Spe. 155 

Moore 221 

Wes. 243 

- Sha. 349 
Flo. 174 

- Sha. 1043 
Moore 533 

- Goe. 52 
Burns 207 

- Wor. 389 

Pro. 374 

- Ten. 205 



235 



How 



How quick the change from joy to woe - Cow. 32 

— ready is the man to go - - - - - Wes. 242 

— rich that forehead's calm expanse - - Wor. 106 

— richly glows the water's breast - - - Wor. 21 

— sad a welcome ! To each voyager - - Wor. 407 

— shall I know thee in the sphere - - - Bry. 183 

— shall I paint thee? ----- Wor. 327 

— shall I sing Drumlanrig's grace - - Burns 127 

— shall we rank thee upon glory's page - Moore 168 

— sharper than a serpent's tooth - - - Sha. 854 

— should I praise thee, Lord? - - - Her. 138 

— should I your true love know - - - Eos. 107 

— silver-sweet sound lovers' tongues - - Sha. 721 

— smiled the land of France - Whi. 95 

— softly through heaven's wide expanse - She. 557 

— soon, alas ! did man — a sonnet - - - Wor. 362 

— soon doth man decay ! Her. 187 

— soon hath time, the subtle thief - - - Mil. 474 

— soon the fruits of sin appear ! - - - Wes. 233 

— stern are the woes of the desolate - - She. 556 

— strange are the freaks of memory - - Low. 373 

— strange it seems ! These Hebrews - - Lon. 216 

— strange to greet, this frosty morn - - Whi. 196 

— strikingly the course of nature - - - Wil. 28 

— strong and beautiful is woman's love - Fav. 80 

— struggles with the tempest's swells - - Low. 365 

— sweet a thing it is to wear a crown - - Sha. 529 

— sweet and lovely dost thou make - - Sha. 1039 

— sweet is it to sit and read - She. 505 

— sweet it is to sit beside her - Mer. 214 

— sweet it is, when mother fancy rocks - Wor. 234 

— sweet it were, hearing the downward - - Flo. 176 

— sweet the answer echo makes - - - Moore 2QQ 

— sweet the moonlight sleeps - - Sha. 202 ; Fav. 290 

— sweet the sacred legend - Hoi. 117 

— sweet the wild sound ----- Sch. 338 

— sweet were life, this life - Mer. 193 

— sweetly come the holy psalms - - - Whi. 247 

— sweetly could I lay my head - - - Moore 79 

— sweetly doth "My Master," sound! - - Her. 277 

— sweetly on the wood-girt town - - - Whi. 34 

— sweetly shines through azure skies - Byron 145 

— the mountains talked together - - - Hoi. 294 

— the old horse won the bet - Hoi. 309 

— the song was made ----- Mer. 454 

— the Titan, the defiant ----- Lon. 344 

— the world wags ------ Sha. 213 

— they so softly rest ------ Lon. 22 

— this spring of love Sha. 24 

— this world is given to lying - Sha. 408 



Eow O Q o 

Husband ^"O 

How to address him? awkward it is true - Hoi. 314 

— to cheat the devil ------ Sha. 149 

— to live. (From Thanatopsis. ) - Bry. 23 ; Fav. 245 

— unhappy a lover am I - - - - - Dry. 552 

— use doth breed Sha. 39 

— vainly men themselves amaze - - - Flo. 422 

— Wallace fought for Scotland - - - Wor. 2QQ 

— warm this woodland wild recess - - - Col. 166 

— well her name an army doth present - Her. 163 

— well the night is made for tenderness - - Wil. 291 

— when, and where? No answer - - Goe. 256 

— wisdom and folly meet, mix and unite Burns 117 

— wonderful is death ----- She. 31 

— wretched is the fate of those - - - Dry. 509 
Howard, lord Charles, Sonnet to - - - Spe. 27 

— Lord William, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

— Mrs. , Monument of Wor. 408 

— Robert, To ------ - Dry. 267 

— at Atlanta Whi. 353 

Howe, Dr. Samuel G-. , In memory of - - Hoi. 299 

— Miss, "'what is prudery? - - - - Pope 377 

Howe'er in humble words we all - - - Wes. 184 

Howell's song - - - - - - - Hem. 248 

Howlet-face — an epigram - Burns 182 

Howitt, Mary. Buttercups and daisies - Flo. 535 

Cowslips ------- Flo. 27 

Heart's-ease ------ Flo. 79 

Midsummer legend Flo. 355 

Snow-drop, The ----- Flo. 20 

Use of flowers ------ Flo. 495 

Hoy. James, Letters to - - - - Burns 385, 387 

Hubert de Burgh, c. in King John - - - Sha. 332 

Hudson river, The ------ Hoi. 131 

Hugh Margot, a monk, c. in Harold - - Ten. 615 

Hughes, John, and Sarah Drew, Epitaphs on Pope 386 

Hughie Graham,'' Remarks on - - - Burns 335 

Hugo, Victor. The grandmother - - Fav. 354 

Sonnet to ------ - Ten. 721 

Hugo, a squire, c. in House of Aspen - - Scott 562 

Huguenots, Sung of the - - Mac. 136 

Hum of either army stilly sounds - - Sha. 454 

Human action Sch. 2Q2 

— crv, The ------- Ten. 720 

— feelings - - - Goe. 208 

— frailty Cow. 425 

— knowledge - Sch. 247 

— life - Rog. 183 

— life, on denial of immortality - - - Col. 203 

— life, Shortness of Cow. 611 

— lif e'& misery - Bro. 293 



9 Q >7 How 

*& * Husband 

Human praise is sweet — till envy mars it - Wil. 211 

— sacrifice, The ------- Whi. 102 

— seasons, The. (Keats.) - Flo. 280 
Humanity ------- - Wor. 428 

— delighting to behold ----- Wor. 283 
Humanity's bright image to impair - - Sch. 231 
Humble-bee, The ------ Erne. 39 

— petition of Bruar Water - - - Burns 108 
Humboldt, baron von, Centenary of - - Hoi. 272 
Hume, John, a priest, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2. - Sha. 496 

— Thomas, Epistle to Moore 167 
Humid seal of soft affections - - - Burns 140 

Humility - Her. 154 

Humming-bird, To the. (Charlotte Smith.) - Flo. 127 

Humorous and satirical poems - - - Moore 608 

— poems -------- Hood 187 

Humphrey of Gloucester, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2. Sha. 409 

c. in Henry vi., pt. 1. - Sha. 469 

Humphrey, James, Epitaph on - Burns 186 

Hundred years ago, An (anon.) - - - Fav. 108 

Hung be the heavens with black - - - Sha. 469 

Hunger and cold ------ Low. 61 

— and sultry heat, and nipping blast - - Wor. 282 
Hunsdon, lord, Sonnet to - - - - - Spe. 27 
Hunt, Helen Fiske. Spinning - - - Fav. 441 

— Leigh. Abou Ben Adhem - Fav. 394 

Dedication to - - - - - - Keats 229 

Fine weather in May -.-.-.- Flo. 450 

House and grounds - - - Flo. 343 

• Lilies Flo. 476 

Poppies ------- Flo. 478 

Koses -------- Flo. 475 

Sweet-brier - - - ' - - - Flo. 477 

Violets - Flo. 477 

Hunter, Mrs. The primrose - - - Flo. 65 

— of the prairies ------ Bry. 165 

Hunter's evening song ----- Goe. 62 

— of men - - Whi. 48 

— serenade ------- Bry. 118 

— vision - - Bry. 176 

Hunting song ----- Burns 290 ; Scott 379 

Huntsman, rest ! thy chase is done - - - Scott 116 

Hurra ! hurra ! I heard them say - - - Moore 640 

— hurra ! Our watch is done ! - - - - Scott 251 

— the seaward breezes ----- Whi. 115 
Hurricane, The - Bry. 116 
Hurtado, c. in Spanish Gypsy - - - Eliot 267 
Husband, For an unconverted - Wes. 124 

— his own cuckold — an epilogue - - - Dry. 524 

— husband, cease you? strife - - - Burns 258 



Husbandman 

I 



238 



Husbandman, To the Goe. 

Husbandmen, The Eos. 

Hush! - - - - - - - •- Pro. 

— I cannot bear to see thee - - - Pro. 

— speak low ; tread softly - Pro. 

— 'tis a holy hour. The quiet room - Hem. 
Hushed are the winds, and still - - - Byron 

— is the harp, the mistrel gone - - - Scott 

— is the lyre - - White 

— is the world in night - - • - - Hem. 

— on the hill is the breeze - - - Goe. 

— with broad sunlight - - ... - Low. 

Huskers, The - - Whi. 

Hutchinson, John, Death of - - Wes. 

Hyacinth, Poesy of the Flo. 

— The. (Casimir.) - - - - - Flo. 

Hyacinthus. (Keats.) - - - - - Flo. 

Hybrias, the Cretan, Song of - - - - Cam. 

Hyde, Edward, To ----- - Dry. 

Hylas and Mgon, or summer - Pope 

Hymen, c. in As You Like It Sha. 

— late, his love-knots selling - - - Moore 
Hymeneal retrospections -'■-__ Hood 
Hymn after emancipation proclamation - Hoi. 

— at funeral of Charles Sumner - - - Hoi. 

— " At morn, at noon " ----- Poe 

— at ordination of C. Eobbins - - - Erne. 

— before sunrise in Chamouni - Col. 

— for boatmen on the Neckar - - - Wor. 

— for Chicago fair ------ Hoi. 

— for class-meeting, 1869 - Hoi. 

— for emancipation celebration - - - Whi. 

— for Georgetown church - Whi. 

— for my brother's ordination - Lon. 

— for the dead ------ Scott 

— for Thomas Starr King Whi. 

— of a virgin at Delphi - Moore 

— of Moravian nuns of Bethlehem - - - Lon. 

— of peace Hoi. 

— of the city Bry. 

— of the Dunkers ------ Whi. 

— of the sea ------- Bry. 

— of the Waldenses Bry. 

— of trust -------- Hoi. 

— of welcome after the recess - - - Moore 

— sung at St. Helena's island - - - - Whi. 

— to death - Bry. 

— to intellectual beauty ----- She. 

— to north star - - Bry. 

— to the Eternal - - - - - Sch. 



268 
264 
181 

70 
224 
357 
130 

41 
370 
331 

62 
100 
116 
151 

67 



126 

40 

34 
205 
531 
393 
253 
275 

78 
192 
168 
294 
253 
227 
357 
340 
135 

41 
323 
177 
8 
290 
129 
407 
203 

62 
177 
621 
285 

39 
399 

74 
318 



9'JQ Husbandman 

Hymn to the night Lon. 2 

— to the Virgin Scott 133 

— to Vishnu I. S. S. 11 

Hymns- Spe. 651; Tho. 190 

— from French of Lamartine - - - Whi. 88 

— of Homer - She. 509 

Hyperion - Keats 200 

— Earlier version of - - - - - Keats 281 

— to a satyr ; so loving ----- Sha. 814 
Hyperion's curls ; the front of Jove himself - Sha. 832 
Hypochondriacal Pluto ----- Sch. 307 
Hypolito, c. in Spanish Student - - - Lon. 44 
I, Alphonso of Castile ----- Erne. 27 

— am a bard of no regard - - - - Burns 59 

— am a Jew else an Ebrew Jew - - - Sha. 392 

— am a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes? - - Sha. 192 

— am a keeper of the law ... - Burns 181 

— am a man. Let every one - Sch. 315 

— am a man more sinned against - - Sha. 862 

— am a silly puir man - Burns 323 

— am a son of Mars, who have been - - Burns 55 

— am a tainted wether ----- Sha. 198 

— am all the daughters of my father's- - Sha. 289 

— am any man's suitor ----- Ten. 462 

— am as a spirit who has dwelt - - - She. 505 

— am beside thee Ten. 639 

— am cabined, cribbed, confined - - - Sha. 799 

— am constant as the northern star - - Sha. 774 

— am Constantine Kanaris - - - - Ayt. 190 

— am declined into the vale of tears - - Sha. 895 

— am determined to know nothing - - Wes. 341 

— am drunk with the honey- wine - - - She. 504 

— am dying, Egypt, dying - Sha. 938 

— am fading from you ----- Pro. 392 

— am fond of the swallow - Cow. 617 
■ — am footsore and very weary - - - Pro. 127 

— am his Highness' dog at Kew - - - Pope 396 

— am in Rome. Oft as the morning - - Rog. 100 

— am just two and two, I am warm - - Cow. 396 

— am knee-deep in grass ----- Mer. 442 

— am listening here in Rome - Bro. 600 

— am monarch of all I survey - - - - Cow. 425 

— am more an antique Roman than a Dane Sha. 845 

— am my mammy's ae bairn - - - Burns 218 

— am myself indifferent honest - - - Sha. 826 

— am never merry when I hear - Sha. 202 

— am no trumpet but a reed - Bro. 297 

— am not as these are, the poet saith - - Ros. 263 

— am not humble ; I was shown my place - Hoi. 194 

— am not, I cannot be old ----- Fav. 231 



240 



I am not in the roll of common - - - Sha. 395 

— am not merry ; but I do - - - - Sha. 887 

— am not one who much or oft delight - Wor. 418 

— am not only witty in myself - - - Sha. 411 

— am not wiser for my age - Erne. 242 

— am nothing, if not critical - Sha. 886 

— am now, — what joy to hear it - - - Goe. 132 

— am pleased, and yet I'm sad - - White 360 

— am poor and old and blind - - - Lon. 362 

— am queen of the wake ----- Scott 418 

— am rejoiced worthy, sirs, to find you - Sch. 2Qid 

— am Sir Oracle, and when I ope - - - Sha. 182 

— am sure care's an enemy of life - - Sha. 282 

— am the bard known far and wide - - Goe. 116 

— am the god Thor ------ Lon. 247 

— am the Lord that healeth thee - - - Cow. 53 

— am the muse who sung alway - - - Eme. 189 

— am the very pink of courtesy - - - Sha. 722 

— am thy father's spirit - Sha, 817 

— arise from dreams of thee - Fav. 183 

— ask but one — a simple sound - - - Scott 245 

— ask not for those thoughts - - - - Low. 20 

— ask not now for gold to gild - - - Whi. 150 

— bear a charmed life ..■-..-_ Sha. 809 

— bear in youth, the sad infirmities - - Eme. 290 

— beg of you, my brothers - Pro. 437 

— bless thee, Lord, because I grow - - Her. 222 

— bloomed awhile, a happy flower - - Moore 58 

— bow me to my God's decrea - - - Wes. 235 

— bring fresh showers for the thirsty flowers She. 426 

— bring thee, love, a golden chain " - - Moore 153 

— broke the spell that held me long - - Bry. 83 

— brought my wife a stane o' lint ' - - Burns 247 

— buckle to my slender side - Bry. 71 

— built my soul a lordly pleasure-house - - Ten. 37 

— built myself a castle Pro. 428 

— burn, as when thro' ripened corn - - Burns 113 

— but nurse my spirit's falcon - - - Bro. 590 

— call no goddess to inspire my strains - Burns 175 

— call the old time back, I bring - - - Whi. 218 

— call thee blessed ! though now - Hem. 231 

— came, but she was gone --'".-- Fav. 79 

— can call spirits from the vasty deep - - Sha. 395 

— can love thee well, believe me - - - Sch. 164 

— can recognize only as such the one - - Sch. 259 

— can scarcely hear?' she murmured - - Pro. 181 

— cannot but remember such things were - Sha. 806 

— cannot choose but think upon the time - Eliot 97 

— cannot forget with what fervid devotion - Bry. 88 

— cannot ope mine eyes Her. 146 



241 






I cannot skill of these thy ways - - - Her. 185 

— cannot spare water or wine - - - Eme. 30 

— cannot tell how the truth may be - - Scott 15 

— cannot tell what the dickens his name - Sha. 53 

— cannot think that thou shouldst - - - Low. 21 

— care not for the idle state - Moore 24 

— Catherine, am a Douglas born - - - Eos. 201 

— chanced the other eye ... - s c h. 297 

— charge thee fling away ambition - - - Sha. 612 

— claim the right of knowing whom I serve Hoi. 196 

— classed, appraising once - Bro. 94 

— climbed the dark brow of the mighty - Scott 375 

— cof t a stane o' haslock woo - - - Burns 269 

— come, I come ! ye have called me long - Hem. 328 

— come not, friends, to steal away your hearts Sha. 778 

— come, ye little noisy crew - Wor. 489 

— could a tale unfold whose lightest word - Sha. 817 

— could be well content, allow'd the use - Cow. 498 

— could have better spared .... Sha. 408 

— could lie down like a tired child - - She. 411 

— could resign that eye of blue - - Moore 152 

— count the dismal time ------ Bro. 89 

— culled each floweret for my fair - - - Flo. 91 

— dare do all that may become a man - - Sha. 792 

— deemed thy garments, O my hope - - Ros. 247 

— did but dream, I never knew - - - Whi. 331 

— did but prompt the age to quit - - - Mil. 476 

— did not look upon her eyes - - - Ros. 149 

— did not praise thee when the crowd - - Low. 101 

— did not think I should live - - - Sha. 120 

— dine very often with the good old cardinal - Rog. 143 

— do believe, and yet in grief - - - Whi. 153 

— do confess, in many a sigh - - - Moore 160 

— do confess thou art sae fair - - - Burns 237 

— do desire we may be better strangers - - Sha. 217 

— do love violets ------ Flo. 42 

— do not ask, O Lord, that life may be - - Pro. 430 

— do not count the hours I spend - - - Eme. 214 

— do not blame thee that my life - - - Mer. 283 

— do not come to weep above thy pall - - Low. 104 

— do not own an inch of land - Fav. 428 

— do not set my life at a pin's fee - - - Sha. 817 

— do now remember the poor creature - - Sha. 416 

— do perceive here a divided duty - - Sha. 883 
~ do remember an apothecary - Sha. 736 

— don't much spose howe'er I should - - Low. 289 

— dote on his very absence "'"."■" ^ha. 1^3 

— dreamed I lay where flowers were springing Burns 189 

— dreamed that as I wandered - She. 426 ; Flo. 134 

— dreamed that Milton's snirit rose - - She. 507 

16 



242 



I dreamed that I walked in Italy - - - Mer. 

— drink fresh nourishment, new blood - Goe. 

— dropped my pen ------ Wor. 



du believe in freedom's cause 

— dwell amid the city ever 

— dwelt alone in a world of moan 

— eat and eat, I swear 

— enter thy garden of roses - 

— espouse thee for my tree 

— faint, I perish with my love ! I 

— fear that love disturbs my rest 



Low. 

- Bro. 

Poe 

- Sha. 
Byron 

- Flo. 
She. 

Moore 



— fear the devil worst when gown and cassock Scott 

— fear thy kisses, gentle maiden - She. 

— feed a flame within, which so torments - Dry. 

— feel a newer life in every gale - - - Flo. 

— feel like one who treads alone - - - Moore 

— feel that I am possessed of naught - - Goe. 

— fill this cup to one made up - Poe 35 ; Fav. 

— filled to thee, to thee I drank - - Moore 

— first transferred to Rome Sicilian strains Vir. 

— found a corpse, Avith golden hair - - - Mer. 

— found her not — the chamber seemed - Moore 

— framed his tongue to music - - - - Ime. 

— gaed a waefu' gate yestreen - Burns 

— gat your letter, winsome Willie - - Burns 

— gave to hope a watch of mine - - - Her. 

— gaze upon a city — a city new and strange - Hood 

— gazed upon the glorious sky - - - Bry. 

— 'gin to be aweary of the sun - - - - Sha. 

— give thee joy !— I know to thee - - - Whi. 

— give to thee the autumn- rose - - - Flo. 

— give you the health of the oldest friend - Hoi. 

— glance like the wild-fire through country - Scott 

— go, I go ! and must mine image fade - Hem. 

— go, sweet friends !------ Hem. 

— go to the ridge in the forest - - - Low. 

— grant thou wert not married - - - Sha. 

— grieve not that ripe knowledge - r Low. 

— grieved for Bonaparte ----- Wor. 

— had a dream, a strange, wild dream - - Bry. 

— had a dream, which was - Byron 261 ; Fav. 

— had a fellow as my guest - - - - Goe. 

— had a heart that doted once - Cam. 

— had a horse, and I had nae mair - - Burns 

— had a little daughter ----- Low. 

— had a message to send to her - - - Pro. 

— had a quiet dream last night - - - Mer. 

— had a vision of the night - Mer. 

— had a vision when the night was late - Ten. 

— had found out a sweet green spot Flo. 74 



269 
51 

277 
188 

52 

97 
464 
244 
151 
508 

59 
444 
429 
550 
438 
525 
225 
184 
161 

34 
203 
142 
274 
221 
155 
209 
325 

83 
808 
277 

10 
220 
417 
370 
372 
354 
1038 

25 
270 
197 

73 
230 
233 
324 

90 
261 
279 
455 
115 
388 



243 i 

I had most need of blessing Sha. 794 

— had rather be a dog ----- Sha. 781 

— had rather be a kitten - Sha. 396 

— had rather have a fool to make me - - Sha. 221 

— had rather than forty shillings - - - Sha. 44 

— hae a wife o' my ain - Burns 213 

— hate the clamor of the smoky towns - Tho. 384 

— hate the dreadful hollow - Ten. 219 

— hate thee, O Mob, as my lady hates - - Moore 337 

— hated thee, fallen tyrant - She. 397 

— have a bitter thought Pro. 280 

— have a boy of five years old - Wor. 84 

— have a friend, a vegetarian seer - - Eliot 89 

— have a heart with room for every - - Fav. 187 

— have a kind of alacrity - Sha. 57 

— have a man's mind, but a woman's wit - Sha. 773 

— have a name, a little name - - - Bro. 78 

— have a smiling face, she said - - - Bro. 110 

— have a story of two lovers, filled - - Moore 597 

— have a vague remembrance - Lon. 229 

— have an arrow that will find - - - Erne. 315 

— have an exposition of sleep - Sha. 174 

— have been here before - Eos. 147 

— have been in the meadows - Bro. 82 

— have been thinking of the victims - - Whi. 159 

— have bought golden opinions - - - Sha. 792 

— have come with my verses - - - Hoi. 233 

— have considered it and find - - - - Her. 118 

— have done the state some service - - Sha. 910 

— have enough, O God ! Wil. 94 

— have had my labor for - - - - - Sha. 623 

— have heard of reasons manifold - - - Col. 215 

— have loved for the first time - - - Goe. 88 

— have marked a thousand blushing - - Sha. 126 

— have no brothers and no peers - - - Erne. 275 

— have no other but a woman's reason - - Sha. 22 

— have no stately dahlias -.-.'-•- Flo. 157 

— have not felt, o'er seas of sand - - - Whi. 81 

— have not loved- the world - - - - Byron 315 

— have passed a miserable night - - - Sha. 563 

— have peppered two of them - - - Sha. 392 

— have read, in some old, marvelous tale - Lon. 5 

— have seen a fiercer tempest - - - Pro. 53 

— have seen her with her golden hair - - Mer. 187 

— have seen those that wore heaven's - - Mer. 286 

— have set my life upon a cast - Sha. 591 

— have shot mine arrow o'er the house - Sha. 844 

— have song of war for knight - - - Scott 212 

— have supped full with horrors - - - Sha. 808 

— have tasted each varied pleasure - - - Fav. 262 



244 



Hood 175 



I have thee not and yet I see thee still 

— have touched the highest point 

— have trod this path a hundred times 

— hear along our street - 

— hear from Bigorre you are there - 

— hear from many a little throat - 

— hear the trumpet of Alectryon 

— heard a brooklet gushing - 

— heard a gentle maiden - 

— heard a thousand blended notes - 

— heard a voice that cried - 

— heard (alas, 'twas only in a dream , - 

— heard an angel speak ----- 

— heard as I lay, a wailing 

— heard last night a little child - 

— heard or seemed to hear the chiding - 

— heard the bells on Christmas day - 

— heard the trailing garments of the night 

— heard the train's shrill whistle-call - 

— hed it on my mins las' time - 

— heed not that my earthly lot - 

— held it truth, with him who sings 

— held my way through Defton wood 

— hold a letter in my hand 

— hold it a religious duty - 

— hold it, sir, my bounden duty 

— hold that Christian grace abounds - 

— hold the world but as the world - 

— hold you as a thing ensky'd - 

— hope upon familiarity - 

— hung my verses in the wind ... 

— joy, dear mother, when I view - 

— joy to sea how, in your drawen work 

— just had turned the classic page - 

— killed a thousand flies overnight 

— knew an old wife lean and poor - 

— knew by the smoke, that so gracefully - 

— knew, I knew, it could not last - 

— knew that heaven ordains me here - 

— know a bank where - - - Sha. 166 : 

— know a falcon swift and peerless - 

— know a flower of beauty rare - 

— know a hawk from a handsaw - 

— know a maiden fair to see - 

— know a mount, the gracious 

— know a trick worth two of that 

— know her by her angry air - 

— know her not. Her hand has been - 

— know it : by Thy hands and feet - 

— know it is a sin 



- Sha. 793 
Sha. 610 

- Erne. 305 
Lon. 140 

- Mer. 7 
Bry. 310 

- Lon. 342 
Lon. 22 

; Fav. 319 

Wor. 413 

Lon. 133 

Wor, 235 

Bro. 357 

Moore 644 

Bro. 298 

Erne. 207 

Lon. 319 

■ Lon. 2 

Whi. 197 

Low. 252 

Poe 107 

Ten. 179 

Ing. 456 

Hoi. 132 

Cam. 314 

Burns 162 

Fav. 279 

Sha. 182 

Sha. 70 

Sha. 44 

Erne. 189 

Her. 200 

Spe. 699 

Moore 138 

Goe. 261 

Ten. 58 

Moore 192 

Moore 430 

Moore 43 

Flo. 43, 133 

Low. 48 

Goe. 110 

Sha. 823 

Lon. 23 

Flo. 147 

Sha. 388 

Ten. 480 

Wil. 189 

Wes. 288 

Hoi. 2 



245 i 

I know it is my sin which locks - - - Her. 150 

— know not if the sunshine waste - - Wil. 215 

— know not that the men of old - - - Fav. 349 

— know not, time and space so intervene - Whi. 275 

— know not, wherefore, dearest love - - Goe. 66 

— know not who thou art, O, lovely one - Wil. 189 

— know that deformed Sha. 123 

— know the thing that's most uncommon - Pope 369 

— know the ways of learning - - - Her. 177 

— know there might be woes to bear - - Am. 107 

— know thou lov'st a brimming - - Moore 59 

— know where the isles of perfume are - Moore 414 

— know where the timid fawn abides - - Bry. 54 

— lang* hae thought, my youthful friend - Burns 164 

— lay awake past midnight - Mer. 267 

— lay on that rock where the storms - - Hem. 251 

— lay upon the headland Lon. 317 

— lay upon the solemn plain - - - Hem. 263 

— leaned out of the window --•-'. Fav. 375 

— leave you, ye cold mountain - - - Lon. 391 

— lift my heavy heart up solemnly - - - Bro. 153 

— like a "church, I like a cowl - - - Erne. 15 

— like at times to hear the steeple's - - Hoi. 237 

— like that ancient Saxon phrase - - - Lon. 37 

— listen, but no faculty of mine - - - Wor. 297 

— live not in myself Byron 310 

— live within a dwelling of stone - - - Sen. 197 

— lived with visions for my company - - Bro. 159 

— loathed, O Lord, this life below - - - Tho. 446 

— looked and saw within the book - - Dry. 550 

— looked and saw your eyes - Eos. 288 

— lost you as a man may loose a gem - - Eliot 221 

— love contemplating — apart - Cam. 300 

— love my God, my country, kind and kin Fav. 63 

— love the Lord, is still the strain - - - Cow. 644 

— love thee, dearest, with as large a love - Tay. 77 

— love thee — I love thee ! Hood 178 

— love thee, Giulio Bro. 618 

— love thee well, my dainty flower - - - Flo. 311 

— love this gray old church, the low - - Ing. 166 

— love thy singing, sacred as the sound - - Fav. 258 

— love to hear thine earnest voice - - Hoi. 3 

— love to look on a scene like this - - - Wil. 93 

— love to sail along the Larian lake - - Eog. 28 

— love to start out arter night's begun - - Low. 242 

— love to wander through the woodlands - Flo. 479 

— love you sweet ; how can you ever - - Eos. 233 

— loved— alas ! our life is love - - - She. 457 

— loved him not ; and yet - Fav. 336 

— loved you ever, gentle flowers - - - Flo. 523 



246 



I made a mountain brook my guide - Hem. 396 

— made a posy while the day ran by - - Her. 183 

— mark thee, my mother, both word - - Scott 438 

— marked all kindred powers - - - Ros. 227 

— married with a scolding wife - - Burns 206 

— marvel how nature could ever find - - Wor. 413 

— marvel how the fishes live - Sha. 982 

— marvel not, O sun Flo. 427 

— may abide it ------ Wes. 285 

— may not rightly call thy name - - - Hoi. 142 

— may sing, but minstrel's singing - , - - Bro. Ill 

— met a girl the other day - Fav. 83 

— met a little cottage girl ----- Wor. 83 

— met a traveler from an antique - - She. 406 

— met Louisa in the shade -■--., Wor. 104 

— mind it well, in early date - - Burns 166 

— mind me in the days departed - - - Bro. 50 

— more than once have heard at night - Moore 180 

— mourn for Adonis ------ Bro. 139 

— mourn no more my vanished years - - Whi. 242 

— mourn upon this battle field - Erne. 224 

— murder, hate, by field or flood - - - Burns 187 

— must be cruel, only to be kind - ' - - Sha. 833 

— must have liberty withal - - - - Sha. 213 

— must leave thee, lady sweet ! - - - Hoi. 46 

— need not ask thee for my sake - - - Whi. 339 

— need not praise the sweetness of his song - Low. 374 

— ne'er on that lip for a minute have - - Moore 103 

— never dreamed the wildwood - - - Fav. 300 

— never gave a lock of hair away - - Bro. 157 

— never give a kiss, says Prue - - Moore 645 

— never knew so young a body - - - Sha. 198 

— never loved a tree or flower • - - Moore 430 

— never saw that you did painting need - Sha. 1038 

— never tempted her with word - - - Sha. 125 

— never wandered 'mong the flowers - - Flo. 333 

— never was worthy of you, Douglas - - Fav. 402 

— often wish this languid lyre - - - Moore 35 

— once heard an angel, by night - - - Mer. 265 

— once into a forest far Goe. 35 

— once was a maid, though I -cannot - Burns 56 

— once was fond of fools - Goe. 243 

— only know we loved in vain - - - Byron 228 

— only speak right on - Sha. 779 

— opened the eyes of my soul - Ing. 358 

— own I am shocked at the purchase - - Cow. 449 

— pace the sounding sea-beach and behold - Lon. 365 

— pant for the music which is divine - - She. 477 

— passed an inland cliff precipitate - - Ing. 216 

— passed her one day in a hurry - - - Wil. 186 



247 

I picked a rustic nosegay lately - - - Goe. 235 

— place my offering at thy shrine - - Cow. 632 

— plant a tree whose leaf - - - - Bro. 33 

— plucked a honeysuckle where - - - Eos. 151 

— pray thee by the gods above - - Moore 25 

— pray thee by the soul of her - Hoi. 179 

— ransacked for a theme of song - - - Cow. 462 

— reached the middle of the mount - - Erne. 127 

— read, before my eyelids dropt their shade - Ten. 49 

— read upon that book ----- I n g. 395 

— remember, I remember - - Hood 150 ; Fav. 303 

— remember, why, yes ! God bless me - Hoi. 293 

— rise from dreams of thee - - She. 418 ; Poe 23 

— rode one evening with count Maddalo . - She. 207 

— rose while yet the cattle, heat opprest - Wor. 332 

— sadden when thou smilest to my smile - Wil. 77 

— said I stood upon thy grave - Whi. 198 

— said ; nay, pluck not, let the first - Ros. 267 

— said to heaven that glowed above - - Erne. 246 

— said to time, this venerable pile - - Fav. 281 

— said unto myself, if I were dead - - - Lon. 367 

— said when young ' ' Beauty's the supreme Mer. 464 

— sat beside the glowing grate - Bry. 95 

— sat low down, at midnight - Mer. 454 

— sat one evening in my room - Low. 81 

— sat with love upon a woodside - - - Ros. 251 

— saw a little girl -..__- F av . 312 

— saw a maid sit on a bank - Hood 345 

— saw a mother's eye intensely bent - - Wor. 376 

— saw a pale young orphan boy - - - Fav. 215 

— saw a ruler take his stand - Pro. 46 

— saw a smith stand with his hammer - Sha. 348 

— saw a sower walking slow - - - Low. 61 

— saw an aged beggar in my walk - Wor. 480 

— saw an aged man upon his bier - Bry. 49 

— saw an image, all of massy gold - - Spe. 578 

— saw and coveted and took - Wes. 258 

— saw as in a dream sublime - - - Lon. 84 

— saw far off the dark top of a pine - - Wor. 312 

— saw from the beach ----- Moore 253 

— saw from yonder silent cave - - Moore 665 

— saw her in the festive halls - Fav. 202 

— saw her upon nearer view - Wor. 171 

— saw her when life's tide was high - - Fav. 260 

— saw him once before ----- Hoi. 1 

— saw in a vision once, our mother - - Ing. 199 

— saw in secret to my dame - - ' - - Spe. 673 

— saw it all in fancy's glass - Moore 572 

— saw it in my evening walk - Flo. 62 

— saw no heaven, but in her eyes - - Poe 153 



248 



I saw old autumn in the misty morn - - Hood 142 

— saw Othello's visage in his mind - - Sha. 884 

— saw the curl of his waving lash - - - Hoi. 5 

— saw the figure of a lovely maid - - Wor. 372 

— saw the long line of the vacant - - - Lon. 367 

— saw the moon rise clear - Moore 649 

— saw the peasant's hand unkind - - Moore 82 

— saw the pride of all the meadow - - Flo. 49 

— saw the smiling bard of pleasure - - Moore 22 

— saw the twinkle of white feet - - . - . Low. 66 

— saw the virtues sitting hand in hand - - Her. 154 

— saw thee on the bridal day - - - Poe 168 

— saw thee once — once only -..-_-- Poe 72 

— saw thee weep, the big bright tear - - Byron 192 

— saw thy form in youthful prime - - Moore 236 

— saw when I looked up, on either hand •■ Ing. 222 

— saw young Harry with his beaver on - - Sha. 401 

— see a form, I see a face Burns 286 

— see a spirit by thy side - - - - Pro. 29 

— see all human wits ----- Erne. 243 

— see amid the fields of Ayr - Lon. 397 

— see her still, by her fair train surrounded Sch. 103 

— see the chain of a friendship - - - Fav. 227 

— see the exceeding broad command - - Wes. 285 

— see the wealthy miller yet - - - Ten. 28 

— see thy image through my tears - - Bro. 160 

— send the lilies given to me. , (Byron.) - - Flo. 75 

— send you here a sort of allegory - - Ten. 36 
— • sent you a messige, my frien * Low. 259 

— serve you not, if you I follow - - - Erne. 77 

— shall know the loved who have - - - Fav. 129 

— shall not ask Jean Jacques Koussean - Cow. 423 

— shall not look upon his like again - - Sha. 814 

— shall not soon forget that sight - - - Whi. 131 

— shiver, spirit fierce and bold - - - Wor. 252 

— shot an arrow into the air - Lon. 90 

— should be much for open war, O peers - Mil. 39 

— should have deem'd it once an effort - Cow. 505 

— sigh, fair injured stranger ! - - Col. 89 

— sing of a journey to Clifton - - - Cow. 417 

— sing of a whistle, a whistle of worth - Burns 121 

— sing of deadly dolorous debate - - - Spe. -566 

— sing the Cross ! Ye white-robed - - White 399 

— sing the glorious power with azure eyes - She. 521 

— sing the pilgrim of a softer clime - - Whi. 359 

— sing the sofa. I, who late sang - - Cow. 247 

— sit in the early twilight - - - - - Bry. 336 

— slept — 'twas midnight — in my bosom - Goe. 73 

— slept when Venus entered , - Cow. 523 

— sometimes sit beneath a tree •• •• - HoL 12 



249 i 

I sought to build a deathless monument - - Mer. 299 

— spose you recollect that I explained - - Low. 199 

— spose you wonder ware I be - - - - Low. 194 

— stand again on the familiar shore - - Lon. 364 

— stand beneath the tree, whose branches - Lon. 384 

— stand by the river where both - - - Bro. 144 

— stand on the brink of a river - - - Fav, 226 

— stand on the mark beside the shore - - Bro. 145 

— stand upon my native hills again - - Bry. 91 

— steal by lawns and grassy plots - - Ten. 244 

— stole along the flowery bank - - Moore 141 

— stood among them but not of them - - Byron 315 

— stood beside the grave of him who blazed Byron 262 

— stood beside thy lowly grave - - - Hem. 199 

— stood on a tower in the wet - - - Ten. 488 

— stood on Brockets sovran height- - - Col. 170 

— stood on the bridge at midnight - - Lon. 85 

— stood on yonder rocky brow - Wil. 217 

— stood upon the hills, when - - - Lon. 8 

— stood upon the mountain which - - - Ten. 457 

— stood where love in brimming armfuls - Eos. 238 

— stood within the city disinterred - - - She. 430 

— struck the board and cried - - - Her. 252 

— suffer fruitless anguish day - Cow. 636 

— suppose it's myself that you're making Hoi. 296 

— swam with undulation soft - Low. 369 

— tax not you, you elements - Sha. 862 

— tell you hopeless grief is passionless - - Bro. 63 

— thank all who have loved me - - - Bro. 163 

— thank thee, Jew, for teaching me - - Sha. 200 

— thank ye, my friens, for the warmth - Low. 265 

— thank you for your voices - - - - Sha. C68 

— thank you, Mr. President - - - Hoi. 147 

— think him so because ----- Sha. 22 

— think if thou couldst know - Pro. 290 

— think it was spring— but not certain * Hood 343 

— think of thee ! my thoughts do twine - - Bro. 160 

— think of thee, O dearest - Wil. 256 

— think of thee, whene'er the sun - - - Goe. 45 

— think there be six Richmonds - - • Sha. 591 

— think we are too ready with complaint - Bro. 87 

— thirst, but not as once I did - - - Cow. 86 

— thought before your tale began - - - Lon. 277 

— thought of thee, my partner - - Wor. 333 

— thought of thee — on ocean - Wil. 252 

— thought once how Theocritus had - Bro. 152 

— thought our love at full Low. 25 

— thought this heart consuming - - Moore 100 

— thought this pen would arise - - Lon. 396 

— thought thy bride-bed to have decked • Sha. 842 



T 
Ibycus 



250 



I thought to pass away before - - - Ten. 45 

— threatened to observe the strict decree - Her. 240 

— thus neglecting worldly ends - - - Sha. 2 

— too have left my worldly home - - Wes. 266 

— took a year out of my life and story - - Ing. 81 

— took by the throat the circumcised "dog - Sha. 910 

— traveled among unknown men - - - Wor. 104 

— traveled on, seeing the hill where - - Her. 239 

— treasure in secret some long, fine hai:' - Low. 351 

— trust that never more in this world's shade Mer. 268 

— trust that somewhere and somehow . - - Lon. 277 

— too am charged, I scarce know why - Fav. 3-^3 

— too at length discerned ----- Sch. 271 

— understand a fury in your words - - Sha. 902 

— used to love thee, simple flower - - - Flo. 82 

— wait and watch before my eyes - - Whi. 278 

— waited for the train at Coventry - - - Ten. 94 

— waive the quantum of the sin - - - Burns 164 

— walked beside a dark gray sea - * - Ing. 22Q 

— walked with him one melancholy - - Fav. "40 

— wandered by the brookside. (Mimes.) - Fav. 431 

— wandered lonely - - Wor. 172 ; Fav. 28 ; Flo. 37 

— want a hero : an uncommon want - Byron 318 

— want that glib and oily art to speak - Sha. 849 

— want the court-guide, said my lady - Moore 328 

— was a groveling creature once - - - Cow. 85 

— was a strangev ------ Whi. 415 

— was a wild and wayward boy - - - Scott 215 

— was aye telling you - Burns 339 

— was in Greece. It was the hour - - Wih 256 

— was never so bethumped with words - - Sha. 339 

— was not always a man of woe - - - Scott 14 

— was not born under a rhyming planet - Sha. 132 

— was now a coward on instinct - - - Sha. 392 

— was of late a barren plant - - - Cow. 515 

— was sitting with my microscope - - - Hoi. 36 

— was the chief of the race - - - - Ten. 715 

— was thinking last night - . . Hoi. 38 

— was thy neighbor once, thou rugged pile Wor. 490 

— was to wecl young Fatima - Mer. 268 

— was with my lady when she died - - Pro. 234 

— watch and long have watched - - - Wor. 234 

— weep for Adonais — he is dead - - - She. 366 

— went into the deserts of dim sleep - - She. 506 

— went out full of youthful hope - - - Wes. 264 

— went to seek for Christ ----- Low. <56 

— were but little happy Sha. 117 

— who accompanied with faithful pace - - Wor. 354 

— who erewhile the happy garden sung - Mil. 292 

— will buy with you, sell with you - - - Sha. 184 



2^1 Ibycus 

I will feed fat the ancient grudge - - Sha. 184 

— will, I will, the conflict's past - - Moore 26 

— will kill thee a hundred and fifty ways - Sha. 225 

— will look out to his future - Bro. 101 

— will love thee — half a year - - - Bro. 115 

— will make a star-chamber matter - - Sha. 42 

— will make it a felony to drink - - - Sha. 517 

— will not have the mad Clytie Hood 176 ; Flo. 149 

— will not let you say a woman's part - Pro. 321 

— will not rob the rose of its soft hue - Byron 245 

— will not spoil thy purple with my du it - Bro. 154 

— will not weep for Adon ----- Mer. 461 

— will paint her as I see her - Bro. 66 

— will praise the Lord ----- Cow. 94 

— will praise thee every day - Cow. 57 

— will roar you gently ----- gha. 164 

— will see thee at Philippi - Sha. 783 

— will show myself highly fed - Sha. 261 

— will speak daggers to her - Sha. 830 

— wish I could like zephyrs steal - - Moore 34 

— wish I was by that dim lake - - - Moore 274 

— wish my love were in a mire, " Eemarks on, Burns 305 

— wish thy lot, now bad, still worse - - Cow. 610 

— wish to tune my quivering lyre - * Byron 133 

— woke in the night, and the darkness - Ing. 265 

— wol bywaile, in maner of tragedye - - Cha. 465 

— wonder did you ever count - - - Pro. 344 

— would build a cloudy house - - - - Bro. 98 

— would fain die a dry death - - - Sha. 2 

— would I were a careless child - - Byron 172 

— would I were a painter - - - Whi. 279 

— would I were by that dim lake - - - Poe 39 

— would more natures were like thine - Low. 10 

— would not always reason - Bry. Ill 

— would not be a king ----- She. 472 

— would not have this perfect love - - - Low. 20 

— would not sin, in this half -playful strain Whi. 294 

— would not spend another such a night - Sha. 563 

— would that I were low laid in my grave - Sha. 336 

— would the gift I offer here - - - - Whi, 112 

— would the gods had made thee poetical - Sha. 218 

— would 'twere bedtime, Hal - - - - Sha. 405 

— wrote some lines once on a time - - Hoi. 12 

Iachimo, c. in Cymbeline Sha. 944 

Iago, c. in Othello Sha. 879 

Ianthe, To ------ - Byron 277 

Iapetionidem laudavit cseca vetustas - - Mil. 532 

Iblis and Abraham P. of F. 107 

Ibn Sawa, lord of Bahrein - - - - P. of F. 27 

Ibycus. Cranes of Sch. 140 



Icebergs 
If 



252 



Icebergs in the German ocean - - - Cow. 506 

Ichabod! - - - - - - - - Wtii. 146 

Icta fenestra Euri flatu stridebat - - - Cow. 648 

I'd mourn the hopes ----- Moore 248 

Ideal, An ------- Pro. 317 

— and life, The Sch. 189 

— of woman Sch. 261 

Ideals, The - Sch. 109 

Idem Latine Redditum ----- Cow. 434 

Iden, Alexander, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2. - - Sha. 496 

Idiot boy, The ------- Wor. 119 

Idle shepherd boys, The - - - - - Wor. 83 

Idleness Wil. 299 

Idols - Hoi. 201 

Idonea, c. in The Borderers - Wor. 43 

Idyl for duchess of Weimar ... - Goe. 150 

Idyls of the king - - - - - - Ten. 253 

If after every tempest come such calms - - Sha. 887 

— all the gentlest hearted friends I know - Bro. 86 

— all the year were playing holiday - - Sha. 385 

— any, speak ; for him have I offended - Sha. 777 

— any white-winged power above - - - Cam. 193 

— as a flower doth spread and die - - Her. 140 

— as the winds and waters here below - - Her. 222 

— aught of oaten stop or pastoral song - Flo. 372 

— beyond earthly wont, the flame - - Dante 256 

— beyond the grave there is no heaven - Wil. 201 

— bright the sun he tarries - - Erne. 277 

— but one Christian soul appear - - - Wes. 271 

— dead, we cease to be ; if total gloom - - Col. 203 

— death my friend and me divide - - Wes. 157 

— e'er the sacred poem that hath made - Dante 328 

— ever you have looked on better days - Sha. 214 

— ever you should come to Modena - - Rog. 69 

— ever you've seen a gay party - - - Moore 646 

— far from me the Fates remove - - White 362 

— for a world a soul be lost - Wes. 295 

— former times had never left a trace - Moore 156 

— fortune play thee false to-day - - - Fav. 69 

— from the public way you turn your step - Wor. 123 

— Gideon's fleece, which drenched with dew Cow. 496 

— God compel thee to this destiny - - - Bro. 86 

— he be not fellow with the best king - - Sha. 466 

— his name be George I'll call him Peter - Sha. 334 

— hoarded gold possessed a power - - Moore 41 

— I am right, thy grace impart - - - Pope 222 

— I could put my woods in song - - - Erne. 197 

— I, dearest Lily, did not love thee - - - Goe. 52 

— I do vow a friendship I'll perform it - Sha. 892 

— I esteemed you less, envy would - - - She. 508 



253 



Icebergs 
If 



If I had but two little wings - Col. 163 

— I have seemed more prompt - Whi. 199 

— I leave all for thee Bio. 162 

— I might look on her sweet face - - - Ten. 353 

— I should love a maiden more - Hood 391 

— I swear by that eye you'll allow - - Moore 106 

— I walk in autumn's even - She. 440 

— I were thou, O butterfly --■-"- Bro. 270 

— I were yonder wave, my dear - - - Moore 140 

— in the eyes that rest upon me now - - Wil. 311 

— in the fight my arm was strong - - Pro. 291 

— in the month of dark December - - Byron 243 

— is the only peacemaker - Sha. 227 

— it be a sin to covet honor -.-'.-"■■- Sha. 459 

— it be now 'tis not to come - Sha. 844 

— it be sad to speak of treasures gone - - Hem. 407 

— it were done, when 'tis done - - - Sha. 792 

— it will feed nothing else - Sha. 192 

— Jesus came to earth again - - - Mer. 2£2 

— John marries Mary Cow. 400 

— ladies be but young and fair - - - Sha. 213 

— life were slumber on a bed of down - - Wor. 399 

— love be dead ------ Col. 218 

— men are never their thoughts to employ - Goe. 22G 

— modest youth, with cool reflection - - Pope 348 

— music be the food of love -"'.-.-- Sha. 281 

— my darling should depart - Erne. 246 

— my dear love were but the child - - - Sha. 1043 

— my gossip report be an honest - - - Sha. 191 

— my soul, dear, an omen should dwell - - Pro. 246 

— naebody care for me Burns 213 

— nature for a favorite child - Wor. 416 

— old Bacchus were the speaker - - - Bro. 101 

— one might bolt the bran from - - - Tay. 280 

— parts allure thee, think how Bacon - - Pope 218 

— perhaps these rhymes of mine - - - Lon. 94 

— shame can on a soldier's vein-swoll'n Keats 408 

— she rules him never shows she rules - - Pope 238 

— sleep and death be truly one - - - Ten. 190 

— slumber, sweet Lisena ! Bry. 153 

— sometimes in the dark blue eye - - - Hoi. 85 

— sometimes in the haunts of men - - Byron 253 

— sorrow has taught me anything - - - Mer. 232 

— superstition's baneful art - Flo. 200 

— that high world which lies beyond - Byron 190 

— that the world and love were young - Sha. 1053 

— the ass that bore the Savior - Goe. 370 

— the dread day that calls thee hence - - Pro. 168 

— the dull substance of my flesh - - - Sha. 1033 

— the loved one, the well-known one - - Goe. 75 



If 
Illuminated 



254 



If the rascal have not given nie medicines - Sha. 388 

— the red slayer thinks he slays - - - Eine. 170 

— the road grow dark before you reach - - Fav. 297 

— the whole is ever to gladden thee - - Goe. 256 

— the whole weight of what we think - - Wor. 235 

— the wind had been blowing - - - Mer. 273 

— there be memory in the world - - - Ing. 58 

— there be no great love - Sha. 44 

— there be nothing new, but that which - Sha. 1035 

— there be one that o'er the dead - - - Hem. 347 

— there be prophets on whose spirits rest - Wor. 354 

— there's a hole in a' your coats - - - Burns 122 

— these brief records - - - - - Wor. 241 

— this great world of joy and pain - - Wor. 433 

— this were played upon a stage - - - Sha. 295 

— those who live in shepherd's bower - - Tho. 472 

— thou canst not give pleasure to all - - Sch. 257 

— thou chance for to find - - - Her. 307 

— thou could'st know - Pro. 290 

— thou dost love, pronounce it faithfully - Sha. 720 

— thou hast ever felt that all -"-.?- Fav. 217 

— thou in the dear love of some one friend Wor. 469 
thou must love me, let it be for naught - Bro. 156 
thou never hast gazed upon beauty - - Sch. 260 
thou survive my Avell contented day - - Sha. 1032 

— thoU the power of asking give - - - Wes. 295 

— thou to be a slave should'st will - - - Goe. 223 

— thou wilt leave me, do not leave me last Sha. 1039 

— thou would live unruffled by care - - Goe. 223 

— thou would'st view fair Melrose aright - Scott 12 

— thou'lt be mine ----- Moore 258 

— thy soul check thee that I come so near - Sha. 1044 

— to a girl who loves us truly - Goe. 36 

— to do were as easy as to know - - - Sha. 183 

— to fear but for a weary mile - - - - Hog. 192 

— to grow old in heaven is to grow - - Ros. 255 

— to her eyes' bright luster I were blind - Goe. 216 

— to her share some female errors fall - Pope 68 

— to tradition faith be due - Wor. 387 

— Venus in the evening sky - Goe. 239 

— we could see below Her. 278 

— we should fail? ------ Sha. 792 

— wealth is gone — then something - - - Goe. 224 

— while my passion I impart - - - Col. 41 

— with my all I cannot part - Wes. 295 

— with old love of you, dear hills ! - - Wor. 319 

— worth, if genius, to the world - - White 214 

— ye gae up to yon hill-top - - - - Burns 33 

— ye keep hidden your mind - - P. of F. 55 

— ye lay bound upon the wheel of change - Arn. 148 



255 



if 

Illuminated 



If yet there be a few that take delight - - Dry. 

— you can look into the seeds - - - Sha. 

— you did know to whom I gave the ring - Sha. 

— you have tears prepare to shed them - Sha. 

— you have writ your annals true - - - Sha. 

— you rattle along like your mistress's - Burns 

— you would see the lady-fern - Flo. 

— you're waking, call me early - - - Ten. 

— Zeus chose us a king of the flowers - - Bro. 
Iglesias, From Spanish of Bry. 
Ignorant and arrogant— an epigram - - Cow. 
Ignoto — " To look upon a work of rare - Spe. 

II descend le cercueil ; et les roses - - - Flo. 

— penseroso ------- Mil. 

— Ponto Vecchio di Firenze - Lon. 
Iliad of Homer. See Homer's Iliad. 

Specimen of - - - - . - - Ten. 

— The — an epigram - - - - - Sch. 
I'll ask the sylph who round thee flies - Moore 

— aye ca' in by yon town ... - Burns 

— bid the hyacinth to blow - Cam. 

— choose this tree for mine - Flo. 

— example you with thievery - Sha. 

— give thee, good fellow, a twelvemonth - Scott 

— kiss thee yet, yet ----- Burns 

— know no more, the heart is torn - - Cra. 

— love her dearly, ever, ever dearly - - Sha. 

— make assurance double sure - - - Sha. 

— never leave thee," Eemarks on - - Burns 

— not budge an inch -■-'-_- Sha. 

— put a girdle round about ---.--- Sha. 

— rant as well as thou ----- Sha. 

— rather dwell alone - Scott 

— row thee o'er the lea-rig - Burns 

— talk a word with this - - - - - Sha. 

— tell you a story that's not in Tom Moore - Hood 

— tickle your catastrophe ----- Sha. 

— woo thee, world, again - Fav. 

III can he rule the great that cannot - Spe. 

— fares the bark, with tackle riven - - Scott 

— fated genius ! Heaven taught Fergusson ! Burns 

— fated heart ! and can it be - - - - Byron 

— fated maid, in whose unhappy train - White 

— fits the abstemious muse - - - - Erne. 

— omens ------- Moore 

— strives the will, 'gainst will more wise - Dante 
Illegitimate child, Welcome to his - - Burns 
Illness of a favorite child --...- Burns 
Illo, a field-marshal, c. in The Piccolomini - Col. 
Illuminated city, The - - - - Hem. 



492 
789 
203 
778 
687 
183 
116 

43 
180 
151 
610 

25 
345 
425 
368 



228 
78 
270 
217 
491 
759 
420 
210 
498 
279 
802 
314 
229 
165 
842 
381 
308 
864 
520 
415 
187 
368 
323 
139 
253 
256 
312 
229 
189 
102 
177 
407 
422 



Illusion 9 56 

Illusion .._----. p ro> 174 

Illustration — a sonnet Wor. 371 

— of a bore ------- Moore 646 

— of a picture- - - - - Hoi. 77; Fav. 293 
Illyrian woodlands, echoing falls - - - Ten. Ill 
I'm ashamed— that's the fact - - Hoi. 214 

— glad I walked. How fresh the meadows - Ten. 73 

— jilted, forsaken, outwitted* - Cam. 303 

— not a chicken; I have seen - Hoi. 11 

— not a single man - - - - - - Hood 584 

— o'er young to marry yet - - - Burns 218 
— - three times doubly o'er your debtor - . - Burns 160 

— Madge of the country ----- Scott 418 
Image in lava, The - Hem. 428 

— in the heart. The Hem. 231 

— of God, The Lon. 17 

Imagination and taste - - -'.-"- Wor. 581 

— Fact and an ------ Wor. 424 

— ne'er before content — an ode - - - Wor. 287 

— Poems of the ------ Wor. 168 

Imaginative regrets — a sonnet - Wor. 367 

Imelda -------- Hem. 167 

Imitation — "A blithe and bonny country Byron 257 

Imitations of English poets -■-•-'- Pope 443 

— of Horace ------ Pope 277, 506 

Immoderate grief - - - - - - Cow. 523 

Immortal love, Author of this great - - Her. 136 

— love, forever full ----- Whi. 319 
Immortality ------ Sch. 249, 313 

— (Athanatos.) ------ White 267 

— a sonnet - - Wor. 381 

— Hope for. (Campbell.) - Fav. 205 

— Human life on denial of - Col. 203 

— Intimations of ----- - Wor. 498 

Immured in Bothwell's towers - Wor. 388 

Immutable, The Sch. 249 

Imogen, dtr. of Cymbeline, c. in Cymbeline - Sha. 944 

Imparted Jove ------- Pope 401 

Impr tie it of a Father's rod --.-■-- Wes. 281 

Impc rio is Caesar, dead and turned - - Sha. 841 

ImposicLone manuum, De Her. 574 

Imprisoned count, Song of the - - - Goe. 110 

Impromptu Hoi. 209 ; Moore 70, 338 

— after visit to Mrs. - Moore 203 

— on leaving some friends - - - Moore 185 

— on Mrs. Riddel's birthday - - - - Burns 141 

Impulses, The - - Sch. 262 

Imraus family, Sura of - P. of F. 65 

In a bondsman's key with bated - - - Sha. 185 

— a brook which learned to fret - • - Flo. 164 



257 



Illusion 
In 



In a deep vale, 'mongst simple swains - - Sch. 188 

— a drear-nighted December - Keats 238 

— a small chamber, friendless - Low. 102 

— a soft complexioned sky - Eos. 146 

— a wild tranquil vale Flo. 486 

— a word — a sonnet Goe. 214 

— absence — a sonnet ------ Low. 24 

— action how like an angel - Sha. 823 

— after time a sage of mickle lore - - Keats 274 

— age and feebleness extreme - - - Wes. 58 

— all you speak let truth and candor - - Pope 55 

— amaze, lost I gaze ----- Pope 391 

— Armorik, that clepid is - - Cha. 309 

— Attica thy birthplace ----- Lon. 364 

— awful ruins iEtna thunders nigh - - - Scott- 372 

— beauty or wit, no mortal as yet - - Pope 367 

— broad daylight, and at noon - - - - Lon. 216 

— Bruges town is many a street - - - Wor. 293 

— calm and cool and silence - Whi. 172 

— candent ire the solar splendor - - - Hoi. 171 

— clover. (W. Thornbury.) - Flo. 194 

— Cnidus born, the consort I became - - Cow. 515 

— coming by the brig o' Dye - - - Burns 215 

— Copemams ear this truth let echo tell - Cow. 493 

— copy of Castle of Indolence - - - - Wor. 103 

— dark fens of the dismal swamp - - - Lon. 42 

— days, my Kate, when life was new - Moore 117 

— days of old, there lived, of mighty fame - Dry. 325 

— days of old when Arthur - Dry. 417 

— days of old while Grecian bards - - Sch. 11 

— days of yore how fortunately fared - - Wor. 610 

— desultory walk through orchard - - Wor. 458 

— distant countries have I been - Wor. 109 

— due observance of an ancient rite - - Wor. 280 

— durance vile here must I wake - - Burns 142 

— equal scale weighing delight - - - Sha. 813 

— every hour of joy ------ Goe. 85 

— faith and hope the world - Pope 209 

— faith, I do not love thee with mine eyes - Sha. 1045 

— faith, Squier, thou hast the wel y-quit - Cha. 308 

— faith 'twas strange - - - - - - Sha. 883 

— Farsistan the violet spreads - - - Erne. 245 

— fashion, as a snow-white rose - - Dante 350 

— Flaundres whilom was a companye - - Cha. 376 

— gardens oft a beauteous flower - - - Flo. 81 

— Genoa, when the sunset gave - - - Hem. 115 

— gold and silk and robes of pride - P. of F. 57 

— grappled ships around The Victory - - Eos. 297 

— heaven a spirit doth dwell - Poe 99 

— her ear he whispers gayly - Ten. 113 



In 258 

In her first passion woman loves her lover Byron 360 

— her starry shade of dim and solitary - Fav. 20 

— his chamber weak and dying - Lon. 80 

— his old lunes again ----- Sha. 59 

— his blest name, who was his own - - - Goe. 257 

— his tower sat the poet ----- Low. 16 

— hope to merit heaven by making earth Byron 281 

— horologium. (Latin.) - " - She. 558 

— joy, in pain, in sorrow ----- Pro. 372 

— joyous youth, what soul hath never known Cam. 57 

— king Cambyses' vein ----- Sha. 393 

— language warm as could be breathed - Cow. 491 

— law an infant, and in years a boy - Byron 143 

— law, what plea so tainted - - - - Sha. 193 

— listening mood she seemed to stand - - Scott 113 

— London once I lost my way - Hood 398 

— London was a priest, an annueler - - Cha. 352 

— loving thee thou know'st I am forsworn - Sha. 1046 

— maiden meditation, fancy free - - - Sha. 165 

— man's most dark extremity --■'_- Scott 262 

— many forms we try to utter God's infinity - Erne. 298 

— Mather's Magnalia Christi - - - - Lon. 212 

— Mauchline there dwells six proper - Burns 37 

— May when sea- winds - - - Erne. 39 ; Flo. 530 

— May when the daisies appear on the green Burns 332 

— memoriam ------- Ten. 179 

— memoriam, Edward Bliss Emerson - - Erne. 224 

— metri genus ------- Her. 561 

— midmost Ind, beside Hydaspes cool - Keats 300 

— moments to delight devoted - - - Byron 254 

— my boyhood's days so drear - - - - Goe. 21 

— my dream, methought I trod - - - Whi. 195 

— my garden three ways met - - - - Erne. 307 

— my mind's eyes a temple - Wor. 250 

— my mmd's eye, Horatio .■_■-_ Sha. 814 

— my school days, when I had lost - - Sha. 182 

— my youth I never did ----- Sha. 211 

— narrowest girdle, O reluctant muse - - Hoi. 64 

— obitum prsesulis eliensis - - Mil. 541 

— ocean's wide domains ----- Lon. 43 

— olde dayes of the kyng Arthour - - - Cha. 197 

— one dread night our city saw - - - Byron 249 

— one of those excursions (may they ne'er - Wor. 589 

— our museum galleries - Ros. 21 

— Paradise while moonbeams played - - Goe. 382 

— peace love tunes the shepherd's reed - Scott 17 

— pious times, ere priestcraft did begin - - Dry. 90 

— pleasing memory of all he stole - - Pope 126 

— poisonous dens, where traitors hide - - Hoi. 251 

— politics, if thou would'st mix - - - Burns 183 



250 



In 



In pride, in reasoning pride, our error lies - Pope 190 

— quantity - Ten. 395 

— quest - Whi. 387 

— reverie. (Harriet McEwen Kimball.) - Fa v. 148 

— St. Luke's gospel we are told - - - Lon. 399 

— Scotland's realm, where trees are few - Cow. 500 

— se perpetuo tempus revolubile gyro - - Mil. 521 

— se'enteen hunder and forty-nine - - Burns 187 

— search of prey once raised his pinions - Goe. 176 

— seditionem horrendam - Cow. 478 

— short measures life may perfect be Fav. 422 

— silence and in solitude we went - - Dante 77 

— simmer, when the hay was mawn - Burns 239 

— single blessedness ----- Sha. 162 

— sky and wave the white clouds - - - Whi. 305 

— slumber, I prithee how it is - - - Moore 196 

— solitude where we are least alone - Byron 312 

— spreading mantle to my chin - - - Goe. 214 

— spring of youth it was my lot Poe. 167 

— spring's green lap there blooms a flower - Flo. 207 

— submersionem navigii cui - Cow. 415 

— such a night, when every louder wind - Flo. 493 

— sullen pomp the tall cathedral frowns - - Hoi. 22 

— summer— a song ------ Goe. 52 

— sunset's light o'er Afric thrown - - - Hem. 348 

— that black forest, where when day - - Whi. 283 

— that building long and low - Lon. 220 

— that delightful province of the sun - - Moore 359 

— that desolate land and lone - Lon. 375 

— that proud port, which her so goodly - Spe. 689 

— that soft season, when descending showers Pope 451 

— that wild deluge where the world - - Dry. 37 

— the ancient town of Bruges - Lon. 76 

— the black jungles of man's ignorance - Arn. 81 

— the cave which wild weeds cover - - - She. 505 

— the clear heaven of her delightful eye - Fav. 337 

— the convent of Drontheim - Lon. 2Q2 

— the deep blue of Eve ----- Cam. 232 

— the deep heart of man a poet - - - Erne. 313 

— the deep hour of dreams - Hem. 212 

— the desert a fountain is springing - Byron 225 

— the dirge we sung o'er him no censure - Moore 594 

— the dead vast and middle - Sha. 814 

— the deepest nights of winter - - - Goe. 193 

— the drizzling mist, with the snow - - Goe. 76 

— the elder days of art ----- Lon. 130 

— the fair land o'erwatched by Ischia - - Whi. 238 

— the faith that looks through death - - Wor. 500 

— the full tide of melody and mirth - - Hem. 382 

— the garb of old Gaul, with the fire - - Burns 327 



In 

Incantation 



260 



In the garden ' Lon. 346, 350 

— the garden at Swainston - Ten. 536 

— the glooming light of middle night - - Ten. 465 

— the greenest of our valleys - - - Poe 80 

— the harbor - - - - - - - . Lon. 402 

— the heroic days when Ferdinand - - Lon. 264 

— the hour of twilight shadows - - - Hoi. 27 

— the lines that you sent are the muses - Pope. 396 

— the little southern parlor - - Hoi. 181 ; Fav. 166 

— the lost battle, borne down - Scott 67 

— the market-place of Bruges - Lon. 77 

— the midway of this our mortal life - - Dante 1 

— the morning of life ----- Moore 256 

— the most high and palmy state - - Sha. 812 

— the mouth of the good and the noble - - Sch. 243 

— the name of the Nine - - - - Burns 359 

— the night she told a story - Ing. 508 

— the molten-golden moonlight - - - Mer. 457 

— the old age black was not counted - - Sha. 1043 

— the old churchyard of his native town - Lon. 401 

— the old colony days in Plymouth - - - Lon. 191 

— the old days of awe ----- Low. 11 

— the old days (a custom laid aside - - Whi. 312 

— the old Hebrew myth the lion's frame - Whi. 352 

— the outer court I was singing - - - Pro. 336 

— the outskirts of the village - Whi. 227 

— the pleasant orchard closes - - - - Bro. 223 

— the quarries should you toil - - - Fav. 259 

— the quiet days Hoi. 243 

— the silence and grandeur of midnight - Hem. 262 

— the silence of my chamber - Ayt. 159 

— the silence of the midnight - - - Hem. 214 

— the small and great world too - - - Goe. 32 

— the solemn days of old - : - Whi. 144 

— the spring a fuller crimson - - - - Ten. 89 

— the sweet shire of Cardigan - - - Wor. 414 

— the sweet solitude of this calm place - - She. 537 

— the twilight ------- Low. 375 

— the valley of Cauteretz ----- Ten. 386 

— the valley of the Pegnitz - Lon. 79 

— the valley of the Vire Lon. 217 

— the vaward of our youth I must - - Sha. 413 

— the village churchyard she lies - - - Lon. 214 

— the warm, black mill-pool winking - - Mer. 459 

— the warm isles of India's summer sea - Moore 380 

— the west, the weary day - Fav. 148 

— the wood where shadows are deepest - - Pro. 231 

— the worst inn's worst room - - - Pope 250 

— the year since Jesus died for men - Byron 64 

— the year's early nonage - Dante 81 



261 



In 
Incantation 



In thee, I fondly hoped to clasp - - Byron 131 

— these bold times, when learning's sons - Gol. 140 

— these deep solitudes and awful cells - - Pope 109 

— these fair vales hath many a tree - - Wor. 468 

— these gay thoughts the loves - - - Pope 337 

— these sad hours a prey to ceaseless - - Cow. 36 

— this mimic form of a matron - - - Cow. 607 

— this neglected mirror (the broad - - Eog. 35 

— this new shade of death - - Eos. 2861 

— this noble ring to-day - Goe. 89 

— this still place, remote from men - - Wor. 256 

— this strange land, this uncouth clime - Burns 168 

— those cold regions which no summer's - Dry. 493 

— those holy fields - ----- Sha. 382 

— thoughts sublime that pierce the night - Eliot 139 

— thousand forms mayst thou attempt - Goe. 379 

— thriving arts long time had Holland - - Dry. 53 

— Thule lived a monarch - Goe. 109 

— time the savage bull Sha. 113 

— trance and dream of old - Whi. 350 

— travel - Mer. 463 

— trellised shed with clustering roses - - Wor. 334 

— truth when I have crossed dark - - - Sch. 303 

— truthfulness of act be our faith seen P. of F. 29 

— vain doth earthly bliss afford - - - Wes. 290 

— vain doth the assassin dark - Wes. 81 

— vain I seek and sue to her for grace - - Spe. 690 

— vain I think, right honorable lord - - Spe. 27 

— vain to live from age to age - Cow. 487 

— vain we fondly strive to trace - - - Moore 81 

— vain with angry hearts we dare - - - Wes. 294 

— vain ye woo me to your harmless joys - Cow. 630 

— vain you boast poetic names of yore - - Pope 376 

— visions of the dark night - Poe 166 

— war time - - - - - - - - Hoi. 250 

— weariness and pain Wes. 326 

— wedlock a species of lottery lies - - Moore 70 

— Westminster's royal halls - Whi. 76 

— what rich harmony, what polished - - Fav. 22 

— winter when the rain rain'd cauld - - Burns 321 

— witching slumbers of the night - - Moore 95 

— wood and wild, ye warbling throng - Burns 181 

— words as fashions, the same rule will hold - Pope 49 

— Xanadu did Kubla Khan - - - - Col. 207 

— yonder valley there dwelt - - - Moore 271 

— youth before I waxed old - - - Spe. 673 

— youth from rock to rock - - Wor. 145 ; Flo. 428 
Ina, a tragedy, Epilogue to - - - - Moore 598 
Inaudible and noiseless foot of time - - Sha. 277 
Incantation, An - Moore 635 



Incantation O A Q 

Ingelow zo ^ 

Incantation in CEdipus - Dry. 553 

Incarnation, The Wes. 328 

Inchcape rock, The. (Southey.) - - - Fav. 395 

Incident at Bruges Wor. 293 

— in a railroad car Low. 44 

— of a dog ---.... Wor. 420 
Incipis irridens ; stomachans - Her. 579 

Inclusions Bro. 294 

Inclusiveness— a sonnet --■,-_ p s. 258 

Incomparable soporific doctor, The - - Tho. 415 

Incompleteness - Pro. 114; Fav. 407 

Inconnue, L' -. - Hoi. 79 

Inconstancy - Moore 72 

— of woman ------- Cow. 518 

Increased love of life with age - Gol. 440 

Indeed this very love which is my boast - Bro. 155 

Independence, Inscription for altar to - Burns 184 

— Resolution and - - - - - - Wor. 178 

Index to Biglow papers ----- Low. 299 

— to characters in the plays - Sha. 1088 

— to familiar passages - Sha. 1076 

— to poems Hoi. 323; Lon. 489; Lav/. 421; Whi. 431 
Indian at burial-place of his fathers - Bry. 58 

— city, The ------- Hem. 175 

— emperor, The," An epilogue to - - - Dry. 511 

— girl's lament, The ---*._ Bry. 44 

— jasmine flower. (Eyan.) - - Flo. 122 

— love-song ------- Mer. 190 

— queen," Epilogue to the ..... Dry. 511 

— queen," Prologue to the - Dry. 478 

— serenade, The She. 418 ; Poe 23 

— story, An - - - - - - - Bry. 54 

— summer. (James Dixon. ) - - - - Flo. 277 

— summer, Our ---..--- Hoi. 211 

— summer reverie Low. 69 

— tradition, An ------ Hem. 135 

— with his dead child Hem. 214 

— woman's death-song ----- Hem. 182 

— women, Song of ----- - Whi. 25 

Indigent philosopher, Speech of - - - Gol. 420 

Indignation of a Spaniard Wor. 281 

Inebriety -------- Cra. 517 

Inevitable, Sura of the - - - - P. of F. 88 

Inez de Castro — a dramatic fragment - - Byron 2Q6 

— — Coronation of Hem. 210 

— To- - - - Byron 288 

Infant, Epitaph on an - - - Col. 43 ; Cow. 515 

— M M , a sonnet - "Wor. 244 

— To an Col. 43 

Infanticide, The Sen. 31 



263 



Incantation 
Ingelow 



Infernal offspring of the night - 

Inferno, The. (Cafy.) 

Infirm of purpose ! 

Influence abused 

— of natural objects - 

INGELOW, JEAN, Poems of: 



Give me the daggers 



- Dry. 554 
Dante 1 

- Sha. 794 
Wor. 360 

- Wor. 87 



Above the Clouds 


507 


Afternoon at a Parsonage . 


. 116 


Ancient Chess King— a sonnet . 


459 


Apology, The. (Winstanley.) 


. 402 


Apprenticed 


258 


At one again .... 


. 515 


Binding Sheaves .... 


442 


Birthday Walk 


. 4St 


Brothers and a Sermon 


142 


Cold and Quiet 


. 463 


Comfort in the Night . 


460 


Compensation— a sonnet 


. 438 


Concluding Song of Dawn . 


270 


Contrasted Songs . 


. 348 


Cottage in a Chine . 


134 


Days without alloy 


. 510 


Dead Year, A 


81 


Defton Wood .... 


. 456 


Divided 


9 


Dominion .... 


. 397 


Dream, The 


517 


Dreams that came true . 


. 199 


Failure — a sonnet 


508 


Fancy— a sonnet . 


. 437 


Fathers 


520 


Feathers and Moss . 


. 512 


First Watch 


259 


Four Bridges, The . ... 


. 166 


Friendship 


400 


Gladys and her Island . 


. 366 


Gleaning Song .... 


436 


Gypsy's Selling Song . . . 513 

Henry 467 

High Tide on Coast of Lincolnshire 111 


Honors 


13 


Katie 


. 474 


Lamentation .... 


395 


Laurance 


. 227 


Leaves of Lign Aloes . 


511 


Letter L, The .... 


. 88 


Like a Laverock in the Lift 


515 


Lily and a Lute, A . 


. 358 


Long White Seam 


461 


Looking Down 


. 438 


Love— a sonnet .... 


466 


Lovers 


. 519 


Love's Thread of Gold 


508 


Margaret in the Xebec . 
Mariner's Cave .... 


488 
445 


Married Lovers 


. 439 


Master, quoth the Auld Hound 


514 


Middle Watch .... 


. 265 


Monitions of the Unseen . 


415 


Morn of May .... 


. 270 


Morning Watch .... 


268 


Mother showing portrait of her 


My Fair Lady .... 


. 513 


Nightingale heard by unsatisfied 


heart .... 


. 215 


Noonday 


515 



f Not in vain I waited 
Old Wife's Song .... 
On the Borders of Cannock Chase 

— the Rocks by Aberdeen . 
One morning, oh ! so early . 
Persephone . . . 

Poet in his Youth and the Cuckoo 
Promising— a sonnet 
Raven in a White Chine . 
Reflections . . ... 

Regret 

Remonstrance 

Requiescat in Pace 

Reverie, A 

Sailing beyond Seas . 

Samuel 

Sand Martins .... 
Scholar and Carpenter . 
Sea-Mews in Winter Time . 

— Song, A 

Shepherd Lady, The . 

Sleep— a sonnet . 

— and Time 

Snow Mountain— a sonnet 
Snowdrop Monument 

Song for the Night of Christ's Res- 
urrection .... 

— of Margaret .... 

— of the Going Away 

Songs of Seven .... 

— of the Night Watches . 

— on the Voices of Birds 

— with Preludes .... 
Sonnets : Ancient Chess King 

— Comfort in the Night 

— Compensation .... 

— Failure 

— Fancy 

— Looking down .... 

— Love 

— Promising .... 

— Though all great deeds . 

— To 

— Wishing 

— Work 

Star's Monument, The . 
Story of Doom, A 

Strife and Peace .... 

Sunset 

Supper at the Mill .... 
Though all great deeds — a sonnet 
Two Margarets, The . 

Waking, The 

Warbling of Blackbirds 
Wedding Song .... 

Wedlock 

Winstanley 

Winter Song .... 
Wishing— a sonnet .... 
With a Diamond .... 
Work— a sonnet .... 



433 
462 
444 
511 
509 
138 
218 
465 
223 

85 
394 
349 

31 
454 
348 
471 
216 

47 
226 
141 
506 
465 
514 
464 
457 

350 
356 
357 
126 
258 
213 
391 
459 



508 
437 



465 
460 
444 
443 
443 

58 
271 
193 
516 

38 
460 
477 
518 
223 
165 



441 
443 
437 
443 



Invisible ^ D "± 

Ingelow, Jean. Giving in marriage - - Fav. 378 

Love - - - . - - - - Fav. 375 

Persephone - - " - - - - Flo. 35 

Inglewood forest, In Wor. 388 

Ingram, Ella. Dead leaves - Flo. 195 

— John. Forget-me-not -. - - - Flo. 92 

Going a-Maying - Flo. 56 

Ingratitude - " - - - - - - Her. 168 

— thou marble-hearted fiend - Sha. 854 
Inhabitants of the almshouse - - - Cra. 414 
Inheritor, The - - - - - . - P. of F. 186 
Inhuman man ! curse on thy barbarous r.rt Burns 117 

Initial love - - - Erne. 92 

Inland, within a hollow vale, I stood - - Wor. 271 

Inmate of a mountain dwelling - - - Wor. 197 

Inner chamber, The ----- p r0 . 336 

Innocence, Epigram on - - - Burns 179 

— looks gayly smiling on - - Burns 179 
Innocent child and snow-white flower Bry. 126 ; Flo. 73 

— paper ! whom too cruel hand - - - Spe. 695 

— thief, The - - - - - . - - CoV. 606 

Innocuse mentes, quibus inter flumina mundi Her. 577 

Inns --------- Cra. 387 

Innupta Pallas, nata Diespatre ! - - - Her. 593 

Insane root that takes the reason prisoner - Sha. 790 

Insanity, Lines written during - - - Cow. 50 

Inscribed to friends under arrest - - - Whi. 200 

Inscription, An - - Eog. 252 

— for a garden-shed ----- Cow. 497 

— for a hermitage ------ Cow. 496 

— for a moss-house ----- Cow. 497 

— for a stone Cow. 474 

— for a temple to the Graces - - - Eog. 249 

— for a well ------- Erne. 315 

— for altar to independence - Burns 184 

— for entrance to a wood ----- Bry. 24 

— for fountain on a heath - - - - Col. 171 

— for monument to George Scott - - Scott 434 

— f or Stratfield Saye - - - - - Eog. 341 

— for the tomb of Mr. Hamilton - - - Cow. 506 

— in the parsonage ----- Her. 307 

— on a dog's monument -.-_.'_ Byron 230 

— on a goblet Burns 184 

— on a grotto - Pope 396 

— on a punch-bowl - Pope 399 

— on cup made of a skull - Byron 229 

— on monument Cam. 225 

— upon memorial tablet Col. 21 

Inscriptions Wor. 465 

Insect, To an ■ - - Hoi. 3 



o f\ Pi Ingelow 

^ DJ Invisible 

Inside my father's close ----- Eos. 140 

Insolens, audax, facinus nefandum - - - Her. 549 

Insomnia -------- Eos. 290 

Inspiring and romantic Switzer's land - - Cam. 312 

— bold John Barley-corn - - - Burns 132 
Instead of a pound or two, spending a mint - Cow. 497 

— of a song, boys, I'll give you a toast - Burns 184 

— of rage breathing deliberate valor - - Eog. 35 
Instructors, The— an antique - - - Goe. 270 
Insufficiency ------ Bro. 89, 294 

Insurrection of the papers, The - - - Moore 321 

Intellectual beauty, Hymn to - - - - She. 399 

Intelligence and courtesy not always are - Lon. 94 

Intemperance "Inebriety" -.-:-- Cra. 517 

Intent on gathering wool from hedge and brake Wor. 249 

Inter marmoreas Leonora? pendula colles - She. 558 

Intercepted dispatch, Copy of Moore 627 

— letters ------- Moore 305 

Interdict, An ------- Wor. 361 

Interludes. (Tales of Way side Inn.) See index Lon. 490 
Intermezzo, The ------ Faust 7, 152 

International exhibition, Opening of - - Ten. 389 

— ode Hoi. 152 

Interview, An Eog. 97 

— of Telemachus and Nestor - - - Odys. 32 
Intimations of immortality - - - Wor. 498 
Into a towering passion ----- Sha. 843 

— each life some rain must fall - - - Lon. 37 

— life's ocean the youth with a thousand - Sch. 261 

— the city of Kambalu ----- L n. 275 

— the darkness and the hush of night - Lon. 401 

— the eye and the prospect - - - Sha. 127 

— the sieve we've been pouring - - - Sch. 269 

— the silent land !------ Lon. 24 

— the sunshine - - Low. 10 ; Fav. 421 ; Flo. 366 

Intolerance — a satire Moore 286 

Intra Muros. (Spring has come.) - - Hoi. 165 

Intrepid sons of Albion — a sonnet - - - Wor. 286 

Introductory music Moore 536 

— to ecclesiastical sonnets — a sonnet - - Wor. 354 

Invalids, Epigram on Cow. 516 

Invasion, Expected - - - - - - Wor. 274 

— of Poland, Sonnet on Ten. 481 

— On the expected Wes. 70 

— On the threatened Cam. 200 

Inventa bellica ------- Her. 582 

Inventory, The - - - - - Burns 79 

Inverary, On incivility shown him at - Burns 179 

Invincible armada, The - Sch. 77 

Invisible girl, To the - - ■ - - Moore 122 



SS"* 26G 

In vita Minerva Low. 359 

Invitation, An- - - - - - - Low. 344 

— Epigrammatic reply to - - - - Burns 180 

— The ----- - Her. 283; Wes. 315 

— The. (To Jane.) - She. 444 

— to a medical gentleman - - - Burns 92 

— to the country - - Bry. 232 
Invocation - - - Hem. 331, 409 ; Whi. 166 

— to the earth ------- Wor. 493 

Io, dtr. of Inachus, c. in Prometheus Bound Bro. 115 

Iona — a sonnet ------- Wor. 407 

— Taurina, queen of Thebes, c. in (Edipus Tyr. She. 323 
lone, c. in Prometheus Unbound - - - She. 219 
Iphigenia in Tauris, From - Goe. 404 
Ipholito, Cardinal, c. in Michelangelo - - Lon. 421 
Iras, attendant, c. in Antony and Cleopatra Sha. 911 

Ireland, To - - She. 569 

Irene- Low. 3 

Iris, a spirit, c. in Tempest ... - Sha. 1 

— her book ------- Hoi. 179 

Irish melodies - - - -' - - Moore 209 

— peasant to his mistress - Moore 231 

— schoolmaster, The - Hood 316 

Iron-beard. (Tales of a Wayside Inn.) - Lon. 251 

Iron pen, The ------- Lon. 396 

— tongue of midnight hath told twelve - Sha. 179 
Irreparableness — a sonnet ----- Bro. 82 
Irresolution of youth— an essay - - - Gol. 431 
Irus and Ulysses, Fight of Odys. 253 
Irving, W. Falls of the Passaic - - - Flo. 486 

Irwin, Ellen Wor. 254 

Is all then forgotten? those amorous pranks Moore 615 

— base in kind and born to be a slave - - Cow. 132 

— death, when evil against good — a sonnet Wor. 442 

— God's peculiar people mine? - - - - Wes. 239 

— it a reed that's shaken by the wind - - Wor. 269 

— it a world to hide virtues in? - - - Sha. 283 

— it for fear to wet a widow's eye — a sonnet Sha. 1029 

— it her nature, or is it her will - - - Spe. 694 

— it indeed so? If I lay here dead - - Bro. 158 

— it not sweet, beloved youth - - - Moore 69 

— it not sweet to think, hereafter - - Moore 352 

— it so far from thee ------ Lon. 395 

— it so nominated in the bond - - - Sha. 199 

— it that in some brighter sphere — fragment - She. 506 

— it the moved air or the moving sound - Eos. 164 

— it the palm, the cocoa-palm - Whi. 246 

— it the twilight or my fading sight - - Mer. 256 

— it this sky's vast vault or ocean's sound - Eos. 265 

— it thy will thy image should keep — a sonnet Sha. 1035 



O £ 7 In vita 

ZD « Isle 

Is it you that preached in the chapel - - Ten. 725 

— man's the only throbbing heart that hides Hoi. 121 

— most tolerable and not to be - - - Sha. 122 

— my darling tired already ■ Pro. 35 

— not thilk same a goatherd proud - Spe. 543 

— not thilk the merry month of May - - Spe. 534 

— not this a lamentable thing - Sha. 517 

— not thy heart far off amid the woods - Hem. 381 

— not thy mind a gentle mind? - - Moore 177 

— not to-day enough? — a fragment - - She. 505 

— she not passing fair - Sha. 38 

— the wind on the shield of Fingal - - Oss. 383 

— then no nook of English ground secure - Wor. 251 

— then the final page before me spread - Wor. 306 

— this a dagger that I see before me - - Sha. 793 

— there a parson much bemused with beer Pope 264 

— there a power that can sustain? — a sonnet Wor. 280 

— there a whim-inspired fool - - Burns 90 

— there for honest poverty— a song Burns 278 ; Fav. 123 

— is there — is there balm in Gilead? - - Poe 57 

— there not rain enough - - Sha. 831 

— there not something in the pleading eye - Hoi. 199 

— this a time to be cloudy and sad - • Bry. 105 

— this the land our fathers loved - - - Whi. 51 

— this the man to God so dear - Wes. 271 

— this thy plighted fond reward - - - Burns 268 

— this thy voice whose treble notes of fear - Whi. 74 

— this, ye gods, the Capitolian Hill? - - Wor. 313 

— thy face like thy mother's, my fair child Byron 302 

— thy name Mary, maiden fair? - - - Hoi. 79 
Isabel - - -^ Ten. 8 

— a girl of six, c. in Auchindrane - - Scott 494 

— queen of France, c. in Henry v. - - - Sha. 439 
Isabella ; a story from Boccaccio - - - Keats 165 

— c. in House of Aspen - Scott 562 

— sister of Claudio, c. in Measure for Measure Sha. 67 
Isaiah, On passages in book of - - - Wes. 229, 287 
Isidore, a Moresco chieftain, c. in Remorse - Col. 310 

Isla, Maid of Scott 440 

Islam, Revolt of She. 95 

— "The patient" P. of F. 190 

Islam's rosary— Pearls of the faith - - P. of F. 1 

Island, An - - Bro. 47 

— hunting-song, The ----- Hoi. 33 

— of St. Helena, Ode to - Byron 240 

— of the Scots, The Ayt. 100 

— ruin, The - - - - - - - - Hoi. 108 

— The. (Lady of the Lake.) - - - Scott 117 
Isle of founts, The Hem. 135 

— of Man— a sonnet Wor. 403 



\f e 268 

Isle of Man, At sea off the — a sonnet - - Wor. 402 

Isle, The - She. 508 

Isles of Greece, The ----- Byron 368 

Islet, The ------- - Ten. 387 

Isobel's child - Bro. 36 

Isolani, a general, c. in The Piccolomini - Col. 407 

lk Israel before their foes are fled! " - - - Wes. 268 

— in ancient days ------ Cow. 65 

Israfel --------- Poe 99 

It adds a precious seeing to the eye - - Sha. 149 

— bears thee many a mile away - - - Sch. 193 

— becomes the throned monarch better - Sha. 198 

— beggared all description - Sha. 919 

— cannot be. Where is that mighty joy - Her. 139 

— chanced me one day beside the shore - - Spe. 572 

— chanced that Cupid on a season - - Scott 397 

— chanced that while the pious troops of France Whi. 189 

— did me yeoman's service - - - - Sha. 843 

— don't seem hardly right, John - - - Low. 248 

— fades ! it shifts ! and appears - - - Fav. 190 

— fell in the ancient periods - Erne. 21 

— natters and deceives thy view - Cow. 521 

— hath been heretofore my chance to see Dante 73 

— is a beautiful evening, calm and free — a 

sonnet ------- Wor. 232 

— is a dreary evening - - - - Pro. 108 

— is a familiar beast to man - Sha. 42 

— is a fault oneself to praise - Goe. 368 

— is a fearful night — a sonnet - - - - Bry. 151 

— is a melancholy of my own - - - Sha. 221 

— is a mere wild rosebud ----- Low. 44 

— is a night of beauty: such a night - - Hem. 291 

— is a pity and a shame — alas ! alas ! - - Hoi. 235 

— is a place where poets crowned - - Bro. 75 

— is a sultry day ; the sun has drunk - - Bry. 57 

— is a wise father - Sha. 186 

— is an ancient mariner Col. 101 

— is autumn ; not without - Lon. 413 

— is cold, dark midnight, yet listen - - Pro. 441 

— is done ! Clang of bell and roar of gun - Whi. 316 

— is good. (Divan, x.) Goe. 382 

— is guid to be merry and wise - - - Burns 249 

— is na, Jean, thy bonny face — a song - Burns 229 

— is no spirit who from heaven hath flown - Wor. 189 

— is not always May ----- Lon. 37 

— is not because your heart is mine - - Pro. 191 

— is not death — a sonnet --'-.- Hood 165 

— is not from his form, in which we trace - Cow. 366 

— is not growing like a tree - - - - Fav. 422 

— is not, nor ic cannot come -■--._■■ Sha. 814 



269 



Isle 
It 



It is not poetry, but prose run mad - - Pope 270 

— is not that my lot is low - - - White 361 

— is not the fear of death that damps - - Wil. 234 

— is not the tear at this moment shed - Moore 232 

— is not to be thought of that the flood — a sonnet Wor. 272 

— is not what we say or sing - - - Hoi. 223 

— is not with a hope my feeble praise - - Hood 54 

— is sad to see the light of beauty - - Fav. S7 

— is the dead of night ----- Mac. 166 

— is the first mild day of March - - - Wor. 413 

— is the harvest moon ! On gilded vanes - Lon. 382 

— is the hour when from the boughs - - Byron 76 

— is the noon of night ----- ing. 350 

— is the secret sympathy - Scott 31 

— is the soul that sees: the outward eyes - Cra. 9Q 

— is the spot I came to seek - Bry. 58 

— is the star of solitude ----- Mer. 259 

— is time to be old ------ Erne. 216 

— lieth, gazing on the midnight sky - - She. 461 

— little profits that an idle king - - - Ten. 88 

— matters not, I ween ----- Q- e. 262 

— may be so, — perhaps thou hast - - Hoi. 82 

— may be, yes, it must ----- Hoi. 227 

— means mischief ------ Sha. 828 

— mounts athwart the windy hill - - > Low. 376 

— must be so ! Thou sayest it must ! - - Wes. 22 

— often falls in course of human life - - Spe. 415 

— out-Herods Herod ----- Sha. 827 

— seems a day ------- Wor. 170 

— slayeth and it saveth, nowise moved - Arn. 150 

— stands where northern willows weep - - Hem. 197 

— started like a guilty thing - - - - Sha, 812 

— was a beautiful and silent day - - • Wor. 568 

— was a brave and jolly wight - - - Hood 589 

— was a bright and cheerful afternoon - - She. 432 

— was a dreary morning when the wheels ' Wor. 514 

— was a' for our rightfu' king - - - Burns 272 

— was a green spot in the wilderness - - Wil. 37 

— was a harper wandering with his harp - Hog. 160 

— was a hundred years ago - Bry. 208 

— was a jolly mariner !----- Hood 364 

— was a lordling's daughter ... - Sha. 1052 

— was a merry company - - . - - Hood 374 

— was a moral end for which they fought - Wor. 279 

— was a mountain stream that with the leap Wil. 293 

— was a pleasant morning - Wil. 66 

— was a sad, ay, 'twas a sad farewell - - Tho. 393 

— was a sultry day of summer time - - Wil. 15 

— was a tall young oysterman - - - Hoi. 83 

— was a village built in a green rent - - Ing. 142 



It 

Jafifray 



270 



It was a well of whitest marble - - - Eog. 127 

— was a young maiden went forth to ride - Hood 401 

— was an April morning - Wor. 136 

— was an hour of grief and fear - - - Hem. 253 

— was an hour of universal joy - - - Hog. 94 

— was an hour when he who climbs - Dante 207 

— was as I have seen it - - - - - Sha. 815 

— was Dunois the young and brave - - Scott 397 

— was Einar Tamberskelver - - - - Lon. 261 

— was fifty years ago Lon. 224 

— was Greek to me ------ Sha. 767 

— was in a splenetic humor that I sat - - Eog. 122 

— was in sweet Senegal that my foes - - Burns 247 

— was in the prime — a song. (Spanish Gypsy.) Eliot 179 

— was late in mild October and the long - Whi. 116 

— was Lilith the wife of Adam - - - Eos. 27 

— was many and many a year ago - - Poe 64 

— was midnight when I listened - - - Pro. 253 

— was not in the winter - Hood 180 

— was not many centuries since - - - Hoi. 71 

— was Odin that whispered in Vingolf - Mer. 241 

— was past the hour of trysting - - - Low. 79 

— was St. Mary's eve, and all poured forth - Eog. 55 

— was Sir Christopher Gardiner - - - Lon. 314 

— was some spirit, Sheridan ! that breathed Col. 95 

— was the autumn of the year - Fav. 306 

— was the hour when of diurnal heat - - Dante 185 

— was the month in which the righteous maid Spe. 598 

— was the owl that shrieked - Sha. 793 

— was the place by legends told - - - Mer. 242 

— was the pleasant harvest time - - - Whi. 218 

— was the schooner Hesperus - - Lon. 27 ; Fav. 412 

— was the season when through all the land Lon. 268 

— was the stalwart butcher man - - - Hoi. 74 

— was the time when children bound to meet Hem. 160 

— was the time when lilies blow - - - Ten. 112 

— was the time, when rest, soft sliding down Spe. 683 

— was the voice of my love - Oss. 249 

— was the winter wild ----- Mil. 406 

— was upon a Lammis night - - - Burns 194 

— was upon an April morn - Ayt. 46 

— waved not through an eastern sky - Hem. 418 

— will discourse most eloquent music - - Sha. 830 

— will not have escaped the attentive eye - Low. 160 

— would be argument for a week - - - Sha. 389 
Italian girl's hymn to the Virgin - - - Hem. 212 

— itinerant, The ------ Wor. 299 

— poets, Translations from - Cow. 596 

— song, An ------- Eog. 246 

— sonnet, From an - - - - Eog. 339 ; Fav. 281 



271 Jaffray 

Italian street-song Ros. 141 

Italica, Rains of - Biy. 257 

Italy - Bry. 253; Rog. 11, 34; Whi. 283 

— After leaving — a sonnet - Wor. 319 

— Alaric in Hem. 107 

— Ancient and modern, compared - - - Tho. 197 

— and the world - Bro. 354 

— In - - - - - - - - Mer. 185 

— Italy ! thou who 'rt doomed to wear - Lon. 339 

— Memorials of tour in Wor. 307 

— Summing up in - Bro. 611 

— To. (From Filicaja.) Lon. 339 

Ite leves (inquam), Parnassia numina, musse Her. 591 

Ithaca, Minerva's descent to Odys. 7 

Its balmy lips the infant blest - - - Col. 199 

— tender shoots, fostered with care, extend - Flo. 201 

— windows flashing to the sky - - - Whi. 249 
It's some consid'ble of a spell sence - - - Low. 233 

— the beauteous spring, I see - - - Sch. 129 

— very hard !— and so it is, to live in such a row Hood 352 

— we two, it's we two for aye - Ing. 515 
Itself a star, not borrowing light - - - Moore 458 
Ivan, the czar ------- Hem. 388 

I've had a dream that bodes no good - - Moore 569 

— heard there was in ancient days - - Moore 115 

— often wished that I had clear - - - Pope 509 

— read, my friend, of Diocletian - - White 254 

— seen him before me ! - - - - - Goe. 33 

— wandered east, I've wandered west - Fav. 339 

— watched too late ; the morn is near - - Bry. 210 

— watched you now a full half -hour - - Wor. 101 
Ivon, Lord, and his daughter - Wil. 235 
Ivry — a song of the Huguenots - - - Mac. 136 
Ivy. (Calder Campbell.) - Flo. 180 

— green, The. (Charles Dickens.) - - - Flo. 178 

— song . . Hem. 374 

— The. (Barton.) ------ Flo. 180 

J. D. R., 1862 Hoi. 215 

J. K. W., In memory of - Hoi. 232 

J. P., To Whi. 108 

J. T. F., To Whi. 245 

Jack Cade, a rebel, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - Sha. 496 

— Hall -------- Hood 559 

Jacob then was free from blame - - - Wes. 251 

Jacobite, Epitaph on a - - - - - Mac. 198 

Jacopo Nardi, c. in Michelangelo - - - Lon. 421 

Jacqueline Mer. 256 ; Rog. 219 

Jacula prudentum - Her. 437 

Jaffray, Katherine— a song .... Burns 290 



Jairus 0*7 

John ^ « ^ 

Jairus, Healing of daughter of - - Wil. 42 ; Fav. 113 

Jam pius extrema veniens Iacobus ab arcto Mil. 535 

James, Letter to his brother - - - White 117, 154 

— On passage in epistle to Wes. 176 
Jamie, come try me— a song - - - Burns 228 

— Gay," Remarks on ----- Burns 297 

— the pride of a 1 the green - Burns 293 
Jamy, an officer, c. in Henry v. - Sha. 439 
Jane Shore, Epilogue to Rowe's - - - Pope 94 

— To - - - - - - - - - She. 444, 446 

January. (Shepherd's Calendar.) - - - Spe. 522 

— and May - - - - - ... Pope 466 

— First of - - Flo. 318 

Janus am I : oldest of potentates - - - Lon. 403 

Japanese embassy, At banquet to the, 1872 - Hoi. 258 

Jaquenetta, c. in Love's Labor's Lost - - Sha. 135 

Jaques, a lord, c. in As You Like It - - - Sha. 205 

— son of Sir Rowland, c. in As You Like It Sha. 205 

Jarl Thorkell, Dole of Whi. 332 

Jarvis, c. in Good-natured Man - - - Gol. 178 

— Epistle to Mr. - - - - - - - Pope 335 

Jasmine, Night-scenting. (Moore.) - - Flo. 121 

— Perfume of. (Churchill.) - Flo. 122 

— Poesy of the ------ Flo. 119 

— The. (Cowper.) - - - - - - Flo. 120 

— The. (Moore.) ------ Flo. 121, 123 

— To the. (Jane Taylor.) ----- Flo. 123 

— tree, To a. (Morpeth.) - Flo. 120 
Jason, c. in Judas Maceabaeus - - - - Lon. 324 
Jeanie Morrison. (W. Motherwell.) - - Fav. 339 
Jeanie's bosom— a song - - - - Burns 260 

— heart was frank and free - - - - Burns 302 
Jealous, and with love o'erflowing - - - Cow. 631 
Jedborough, Matron of - - - - - Wor. 260 
Jehovah-Jireh ------- Cow. 52 

— Jesus - - - - - - - Cow. 68 

— Nissi -------- Cow. 54 

— our righteousness ----- Cow. 59 

— Rophi -------- Cow. 53 

— Shalom - - Cow. 55 

— Shammah - Cow. 60 

— to my words give ear - Mil. 486 
Jenkins, a private, c. in Auchindrane - - Scott 494 
Jenny -------- Ros. 70 

— M'Craw — fragment of a song - - Burns 269 
Jephthah's daughter - - - Byron 191 ; Wil. 19 

Jeremiads - Sch. 269 

Jeremiah, On a passage in book of - Wes. 164, 288 

Jerusalem, Christ's entrance into - - - Wil. 39 

— Destruction of ----- - Byron 195 



9 *7 o Jairus 

L « ° John 

Jessamine. See Jasmine. 

Jesse and Colin - - - - - Cra. 124 

Jessica, dtr. of Shylock, c. in Merchant of Venice Ska. 181 

Jessy — a song - Burns 287 

— To ------- - Byron 241 

Jesus -------- Her 204 

— bless our slender boat Wor. 294 

— in this hour be near ----- Wes. 29 

— is in my heart, His sacred - Her. 204 

— hasting to suffer Cow. 70 

— I cast my soul on thee ----- Wes. 240 

— lover of my soul Wes. 351 

— my hope, my help, my power - - - Wes. 198 

— my strength, my hope - Wes. 361 

— shepherd of the sheep ----- Wes. 318 

— the gift divine I know .... Wes. 300 

— the growing work is thine - Wes. 24 

— the just, the good --■-.,---. Wes. 372 

— the sinner's friend, to thee - Wes. 2 

— thou art a tree - Wes. 232 

— thou art my righteousness - Wes. 358 

— thou son of Mary Wes. 112 

— thou that Noah art ! Wes. 236 

— was there but yesterday - Wil. 54 

— where'er thy people meet - Cow. 69 

— whither shall I go ----- Wes. 338 

— whose blood so freely streamed - - - Cow. 55 
Jeune fille et jeune fleur. (Chateaubriand.) Flo. 344 
Jewish cemetery at Newport - Lon. 216 

— family, A ------- Wor. 209 

Jews, The - - - Her. 251 

Jilted nymph, The ------ Cam. 303 

Joan, a country wife, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

— La Pucelle (Joan of Arc), c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 Sha. 469 

— of Arc -------- Sch. 231 

in Eeims ------- Hem. 184 

Joan of Kent, Execution of— a sonnet - - Wor. 368 

Joanna, To Wor. 136 

Job, book of, On passages in - - Wes. 169, 184, 280 

— From - Byron 196 

Jock of Hazeldean ------ Scott 400 

Jockey's ta'en the parting kiss— a song - Burns 262 

Joe. (Albert Laighton.) ----- Fav. 151 

Johanna Sebus — a ballad - Goe. 107 

John, a Franciscan friar, c. in Romeo and Juliet Sha. 712 

— Anderson, my Jo— a song - - - Burns 223 

— Barleycorn— a ballad ----- Burns 192 

— Brown of Ossawatomie spake on his dying Whi. 258 

— Burns of Gettysburg. (Francis Bret Harte.) Fav. 432 

— Bushby's lamentation — a song - - Burns 281 

13 



John 7 A 

June ^ < * 

John de Vien, Sir, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 232 

— First epistle to, On passages in - - Wes. 214, 225 

— Gilpin was a citizen Cow. 240 

— Gospel of, On passages in Wes. 55, 167, 183, 227, 300, 366 

— Hay's bonnie lassie," Remarks on - Burns 309 

— Huggins was as bold a man - - - Hood 481 

— king of England, c. in King John - - Sha. 332 

— O'Badenyon," Remarks on - - - Burns 332 

— of Gaunt, uncle of king, c. in Richard ii. - Sha. 356 

— of Heda, a monk, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 

— of Lancaster, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - Sha. 382 

— of Tours - - Ros. 139 

— Trot— a ballad Hood 579 

— Trott was desired by two witty peers - - Gol. 137 

— UnderhiU - - - - - - Whi. 385 

Johnnie Cope, " Remarks on - - - Burns 329 

Johnnie's gray breeks, " Remarks on - - Burns 299 

Johnny Faa, or the gypsy ladder, " Remarks on Burns 323 

— Peep — an epigram Burns 186 

Johnson, James, Letters to - Burns 374, 422, 500, 510 

— John, Sonnet to - Cow. 495 

— Samuel, Epitaph on Cow. 437 

Johnston, a chief, c. in Halid'on Hill - - Scott 462 

— captain, Letter to - - - - - Burns 482 

Joke versified, A ----- - Moore 645 

Jolly beggars, The — a cantata - - - Burns 55 

Jonah, On a passage in book of - Wes. 290 

— Sura of - P. of F. 75 

Jonathan Swift had the gift - Pope 395 

— to John. (Biglow Papers.) - Low. 248 
Jones ! as from Calais southward— a sonnet Wor. 269 
Jonson, Ben. Advice to a reckless youth - Fav. 323 

Life and death Fav. 298 

Noble nature, The Fav. 422 

Pleasures of heaven -.-.'-.- Fav. 327 

To the narcissus -..._-- Flo. 49 

Jorasse was in his three-and-twentieth year Rog. 20 

Jordan - ' Her. 139, 192 

Jordan's banks, On - - --' - - Byron 191 

Jose, c. in Spanish Gypsy Eliot 267 

Joseph's coat ------- Her. 259 

Joshua, On passages in book of Wes. 257 

Jourdain, Margaret, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - Sha. 496 

Journalists and Minos ----- s c h. 297 

Journey homeward, On a — a sonnet - - Col. 98 

— of life, The - Bry. 137 

— On a - - Wes. 87 

— renewed — a sonnet Wor. 332 

Journeys end in lovers' meeting - • - Sha. 287 

Jove, not I, is the doer of this - - - Sha. 295 



275 



John 
June 



Jove was alike to Latian and Phrygian - - Pope 401 

Joy — a parable - - - - - - Goe. 228 

— and peace in believing Cow. 83 

— and sorrow — a song Goe. 68 

— and sorrow. (Hedderwich.) - - - Fav. 21 

— and temperance and repose ... Lon. 93 

— Hymn to Sch. 74 

— I did lock thee up Her. 217 

— in martyrdom. (Mme. Guy on.) - - - Cow. 643 

— is upon the lonely seas - Hem. 363 

— of my life ! full oft for loving you - - Spe. 701 

— of the Cross, The. (Mme. Guyon.) - - Cow. 641 

— thou goddess, fair immortal - Sch. 74 

— to the fair !— thy knight behold - - Scott 420 

— to the victors ! the sons of old Aspen ! - - Scott 570 
Joyful widower, The — a song . - Burns 206 
Joys of youth, how fleeting 1 Moore 528 

— that pass away - - - - - - Moore 649 

Juan, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 153 

Juana - Hem. 188 

Jubal, Legend of - - - - - - - Eliot 5 

Jubilee of 1850 Pro. 379 

Judas Maccabseus— a play Lon. 324 

Judge not Pro. 32 

— of all, The P. of F. 73 

— of judges, The P. of F. 101 

Judges of secret tribunal, Song of - Scott 456 

— On passages in book of Wes. 259 
Judgment Her. 292 

— of the poets, The - - - - - - Cow. 478 

Judicious drank, and greatly daring dined - Pope 174 

Judicium Paridis ------ Mer. 464 

Judson, Mrs., Grave of. (Miss M. Eemick.) - Fav. 268 

Jugurtha - - Lon. 396 

Julia, c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - - Sha. 21 

— Gonzaga, c. in Michelangelo - - - Lon. 415 

— M , Lines to Cam. 254 

— To Moore 70, 79, 82, 101 

— Vaudracour and Wor. 115 

Julian and Maddalo — a conversation - - She. 207 

Julianus — " Spartan Mother " - - - - Cow. 513 

Juliet, c. in Measure for Measure - - - Sha. 67 

— dtr. of Capulet, c. in Eomeo and Juliet - Sha. 712 
Julius III. , Pope, c. in Michelangelo - - Lon. 450 

— Csesar— a tragedy ------ Sha. 764 

— Cesar, c. in Monkes Tale - Cha. 474 
July. (Shepherd's Calendar.) - - - - Spe. 543 

— Written in, 1834 - Rog. 345 

June Bry. 83; Fav. 158; Poe 33 

— a song Goe. 70 



June <0 I 7(\ 

Keble ^ « ° 

June. (Mary Noel Meigs.) - Flo. 459 

— on the Merrimack Whi. 406 

— (Shepherd's Calendar.) Spe. 540 

Jungfrau, The Eog. 21; Wor. 371 

Junius Brutus, a tribune, c. in Coriolanus - Sha. 654 

Juno, c. in Semele ------ Sch. 56 

— a spirit, c. in Tempest Sha. 1 

— receives Jupiter Iliad 297 

Jupiter, c. in Prometheus Unbound - - - She. 219 

— c. in Semele ------- Sch. 57 

— and Venus, Conjunction of - - - - Bry. Ill 
Juramento eeclesise, De - - - - - Her. 564 
Jurancon, Wine of ----- Lon. 412 
Just above yon sandy bar - Lon. 126 

— as the twig is bent the tree's inclined - - Pope 228 

— as those final words were penned - - Wor. 90 

— at sunset, I would be Mer. 440 

— at the age twixt boy and youth - - Scott 55 

— God!— and these are they - - - -Whi. 49 

— knows, and knows no more, her Bible true Cow. 124 

— like love is yonder rose __--■_ Flo. 106 

— then, beneath some orange-trees - - Flo. 126 

— to begin, — and end! so much, — no more - Mer. 469 

— when the red June roses blow - - - Pro. 257 
Justice - Her. 185, 238 

— Book v. of Faery Queen - Spe. 358 

— Generosity and — an essay - Gol. 397 
Justina, c. in Magico Prodigioso - - - She. 543 
Juvenile lines from Virgil ----- Scott 372 

— poems Pope 27 ; Moore 64 

Juxon, c. in Charles the First - She. 491 

K. ; A., To Whi. 150 

K. ; J. M., Sonnet to Ten. 22 

K, Sura of P. of F. 140 

Kaisers feast, The ------ Hem. 397 

Kallundborg church Whi. 307 

Kambalu. (Tales of a Wayside Inn.) - - Lon. 275 

Kane, Dr., in Cuba. (E. H. W.) - - - Whi. 396 

Kansas emigrants, The Whi. 200 

Kant and his commentators - Sch. 270 

Kate Ten. 480 

Katharina, c. in Taming of Shrew - - Sha. 229 

— c. in Love's Labor's Lost - Sha. 135 
Katharine, dtr. of Charles vi. , c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 

— queen of Henry viii., c. in Henry viii. - Sha. 592 

— Jaffray — a song Burns 290 

Kathleen - - Whi. 171 

Katie - Ing. 474 

Katleen ; c. in Doom of Devorgoil - - - Scott 524 



2V7 



June 

Keblc 



Kazan, Siege of 

KEATS, JOHN, Poems of: 

Autumn, To 238 

Ben Nevis— a sonnet . . . 255 
Burns, After visiting birthplace of 266 

— On visiting tomb of . . 254 

— Sonnet to 255 

Byron, Sonnet to ... . 250 
Cap and Bells .... 300 
" Castle Builder," Fragment of . 276 
Chapman's Homer, On looking 

into 246 

Characters: Albert, a knight. 

Otho the Great 333 

— Auranthe " " 333 

— Baldwin, Earl " " 408 

— Conrad, Duke of Franconia. 

Otho the Great 333 

— Erminia, niece of Otho " 

— Ethelbert, an abbot " 

— Gersa, prince of Hungary " 

— Ludolph, son of Otho " 

— Otho the Great " 

— Sigifred, an officer " 

— Stephen of England " 
Chatterton, Sonnet to 
Claude's Enchanted Castle . 
Day is gone— a sonnet 
Devonshire, Written in . 
Dream, On a— a sonnet 
Elgin Marbles, Sonnet on the 
Endymion— a romance 
Eve of Saint Agnes 

— of Saint Mark 
Fingal's Cave, After visiting 
Grecian Urn, Ode on a . 
Haydon, Sonnet to 
Hunt, Leigh, Dedication to . 
Hyperion .... 

— Earlier version of 
Isabella, A story from Boccaccio 165 
King Lear, Before re-reading . 253 



Lon. 337 



333 
333 
333 



408 

250 
. 258 

248 
. 262 

247 

251 
. 5 

185 
. 242 

269 
. 234 

252 
. 229 

200 



King Stephen, dramatic fragment 
La Belle Dame sans Merci— a bal- 
lad 

Lamia 

Last Sonnet 

Leander, On a picture of— a sonnet 

May Day, Written on . 

Meg Merriles .... 

Melancholy, Ode on 

Milton's Hair, On seeing a lock of 

Modern Love 

Nightingale, Ode to a . 
Nile, Sonnet to the .... 
Otho the Great^a tragedy 
Plays : King Stephen— a fragment 

— Otho the Great^-a tragedy . 

Portrait, A 

Prophecy, A 

Ronsard, From .... 
Sonnets: Ben Nevis . 

— Burns, On visiting tomb of 

— Burns, To 

— Byron, To 

— Chapman's Homer, On looking 

into 

— Chatterton, To . 
— Day is Gone .... 

— Dream, On a 

— Elgin Marbles, To the . 

— Haydon. To . ... 

— Hunt, Leigh, To 

— King Lear, Before re-reading . 

— Last of Keats .... 

— Leander, On a picture of . 

— Nile, To the .... 

— OThou! whose face . 

— Ronsard, From— a fragment 

— Spenser, To 

Spenser, Imitation of . 
Spenserian Stanza .... 



Keats, John. Fancy Flo. 

Honeysuckles Flo. 

Human seasons - - - Flo. 

Hyacinthus - Flo. 

Keen fitful gusts — a sonnet - - - Flo. 

myrtle, A Flo. 

narcissus, The Flo. 

Ode on melancholy - Flo. 

Primroses Flo. 

a fragment She. 

a sonnet Lon. 

After lecture on Hoi. 

Elegy on death of She. 

— — Sonnet on Eos. 

Sonnet to the spirit of Low. 

Keble, John. Happiness - Fav. 
rainbow, The Fav. 

— — rosebud, The - Flo. 

To the snow-dron Flo. 



408 

240 
140 
249 
247 
264 
265 
237 
256 
275 
231 
253 
333 
408 
333 
273 
271 
256 
255 
254 
255 
250 

246 
250 
248 
247 
251 
252 
229 
253 
249 

. 247 
253 

. 252 
256 

. 249 
230 

. 274 

267 
137 
280 

69 
279 
118 

51 
505 

63 
507 
366 
129 
365 
296 

20 

99 
398 
346 

21 



Keeldar 9 h Q 

Kirk * » 5 » 

Keeldar, Death of Scott 447 

Keen encounter of our wits -"---_ Sha. 559 

— fitful gusts are whispering here - - Flo. 279 
Keene, Abel ------- Cra. 454 

Keep for the young the impassioned smile Wor. 196 

— my ribbon, take and keep it Bro. 101 

— the word of promise ----- Sha. 809 

Keepsake, The ------- Col. 160 

Kemble, Frances Anne. Forget-me-not - Flo. 297 

— Mrs., Epigram to ----- Burns 182 

— Mrs., Headings of— -a sonnet - .- - Lon. 134 
Kemble's farewell address ----- Scott 413 
Ken ye ought o' captain Grose? - - - Burns 123 
Kendal and Windermere railway, On the Wor. 251 

— vicar of. On death of Wor. 494 
Kenmore, Over the chimney-piece at - - Burns 108 
Kennedy. Crammond. Long life - - - Fav. 68 

— John, Epistle to - - - - - - Burns 163 

Letters to - - - - Burns 350, 351, .352, 356 

— Miss, Letter to Burns 490 

Kenoza, Lake ------- Whi. 248 

Kent, Earl of, c. in King Lear - - - Sha. 847 

— To the men of — a sonnet -'."--.- Wor. 274 

Keramos - Lon. 368 

Kettelopotomachia Low. 279 

Kilchurn castle, To - - - - - - Wor. 257 

Kill me not every day - - - - . - Her. 145 

Killed at the ford - - - - - - Lon. 321 

Killicranky pass, In the — a sonnet - - - Wor. 260 

Killigrew, Mrs. Anne, Ode to - . - - Dry. 296 

Killingworth, Birds of ----- - Lon. 268 

Kilmansegg, Miss, and her precious leg - Hood 187 

Kilmarnock wabsters, fidge and claw - Burns 76 

Kimball, Harriet McEwen. Angel of the rain Fav. 186 

In reverie ------- Fav. 148 

Kind hearts are more than coronets - - Ten. 42 

— sir, I've read your paper through - Burns 128 

— solace in a dying hour ! - - - - Poe 150 

Kindness, Reciprocal Cow. 599 

Kindred hearts ------ Hem. 347 

King Arthur, " Prologue to .- - - Dry. 507 

— Arthur has ridden from merry Carlisle - Scott 235 

— Arthur made new knights to fill the gap - Ten. 422 

— Christian stood by the lofty mast - - Lon. 21 

— Crack and his idols - - - - Moore 326 

— Hermandiaz - - - - - - Mer. 459 

— John— an historical play - Sha. 332 

— Lear— a tragedy - - - - - - Sha. 847 

— Lear, Before re-reading - Keats 253 

— Limos - - Mer. 270 



O 7 a Keeldar 

- t ^ Kirk 

King Olaf and earl Sigvald .'.'_.-_ Lon . 260 

— Olaf, Saga of ----- - Lon. 246 

— Olaf s Christmas ------ Lon. 255 

— Olaf s death-drink ----- Lon. 262 

— Olaf 's return ------- Lon. 247 

— Olaf s war-horns ------ Lon. 260 

— Robert of Sicily ------ Lon. 243 

— Sheddah's paradise - - - - P. of F. 175 

— Solomon -------- Mer. 279 

— Solomon and the ants - Whi. 413 

— Solomon, before his palace gate - - - Lon. 293 

— Solomon stood, in his crown of gold - Mer. 279 

— Stephen — a dramatic fragment - - Keats 408 

— Stephen was a worthy peer - - - Sha. 889 

— Svend of the forked beard - - - ■ - Lon. 259 

— Thomas Starr — a hymn - Whi. 323 

— Trisanku -------- Lon. 378 

— Volmer and Elsie ----- whi. 377 

— Witlaf 's drinking-horn ----- Lon. 132 

— Mrs., To - - - - - - - Cow. 475 

— and queen. To the — a prologue - - - Dry. 497 

— and slave ------- Pro. 246 

— of all kingdoms ! only thou - - - P. of F. 162 

— of Aragons lament ----- Hem. 216 

— of glory, king of peace - - - - Her. 244, 305 

— of king-s. The - - - - - P. of F. 19 

— of shreds and patches ----- Sha. 832 

— of the kingdom - - - - - P. of F. 162 

— of Thule— a ballad - - - Goe. 109 

— of us all, we cried to thee - - - Bro. 609 

— that hast reigned six hundred years - - Ten. 729 
Kings. See patronymics in general alphabet. 

Kings --------- She. 567 

— are like stars, —they rise and set - - She. 379 

— arms, Ross, Written at the - Col. 44 

— books of, On passages in - - - Wes. 172, 274 

— college chapel — a sonnet - Wor. 380 

— gift, The ------ - Bro. 623 

— house, For the — an epilogue --".-- Dry. 519 

— house. Spoken the first day after the fire. Dry. 481 

— may be blest, but Tarn was glorious - Burns 131 

— name is a tower of strength - - - Sha. 587 

— name twenty thousand names - - - Sha. 369 

— tragedy, The ------ R s. 201 

Kingsley. Charles. The sands o' Dee - - Fav. 411 
Kinnaird. To Adam S. — a letter - - - Col. 19 

Kinnev. Mrs. E. C. Fading autumn - - Flo. 275 

Kinsman -------- Whi. 392 

— beloved, and as a son, by me ! - Cow. 495 
Kirk of Ulpha, The— a sonnet - - Wor. 333 



Kirk 90 a 

Lady ZbU 

Kirk wad let me be, " Remarks on - - Burns 322 
Kirkland, Mrs. C. M. P oetry of Flowers. See 

Flowers. 

Kirk's alarm, The — a satire - - - Burns 119 

Kirkstone, Pass of - - - - - - Wor. 195 

Kismat- - - - - - - - P. of F. 138 

Kiss a lantique, A - - - - - - Moore 142 

— Ae fond — a song ----- Burns 232 

— mine eyelids, beauteous morn - - - Hoi. 187 

— The- - - - - - Moore 72 ; Ros. 229 

— To a - - - - - - - Burns 140 

Kisses - - - - ----- - Col. 32 

Kitten and falling leaves - Wor. 157 

Klopstock and Wieland ----- Sch. 303 

— would lead us away from Pindus - - Goe. 272 
Kneller, Sir Godfrey, Epigram to - Pope 397 

Epitaph on - - Pope 346 

To - - - Dry. 291 

Knight-errant, A - - - - - - Pro. 50 

Knight of St. John, The - Whi. 81 

— of the red cross. Legend of - - - Spe. 29 

— of Toggenburg Sch. 164 

— The. (Agnes.) ------ Hoi. 89 

Knight's epitaph, The ----- Bry. 163 

— of Malta ------- Sch. 223 

— tale, The - - Cha. 42 

Knock as you please, there's nobody at home Pope 376 

Know then this truth, enough for man - - Pope 218 

— then thyself, presume not God to scan - Pope 194 

— thyself. (Mrs. Sigourney.) - Fav. 210 

— ye rot when our dead - Hem. 141 

— ye of Hassans slave? - - - - P. of F. 80 

— ye the land where the cypress and myrtle Byron 15 
Knowing that nature never did betray - - Wor. 189 
Knowledge ------- Sch. 270 

— and characters of men ----- Pope 223 

— and wisdom. (Cowper.) - Fav. 124 

— comes, but wisdom lingers - - - - Ten. 92 

— Human ------- Sch. 24^ 

— of good, bought dear by knowing ill - - Mil. 89 

— to one is a goddess ----- Sch. 270 

— to their eyes her ample page - - - Fav. 32 
Known in vain — a sonnet - Ros. 259 
Knows he who tills this lonely field - - Erne. 127, 302 
Know'st thou. O slave — cursed land ! - - Whi. 266 

— thou the form on tender ground? - - Sch. 194 

— thou the land where the fair - - - Goe. lC r 
Kolatto, a general, c. in The Piccolomini - Col. 407 
Korner and his sister ----- Hem. 410 

— Death-day of ------ - Hem. 412 



281 



Kirk 
Lady 



Kossuth, Louis - Low. 101 ; Whi. 172 

Kraken, The ------- Ten. 473 

Krishna and Eadna united - - - I. S. S. 65 

— cheered - - - - - ■ - - I. S. S. 33 

— in Paradise I. S. S. 62 

— Longings of - - I. S. S. 38 

— made bolder - I. S. S. 44 

— Penitence of I. S. S. 24 

— Kebuking of I. S. S. 57 

— Sports of - I. S. S. 15 

— supposed false - - - - - - I. S. S. 47 

— Trial of, ended - - - - - - I. S. S. 59 

— troubled - - - - - - - I. S. S. 29 

Krunimacher. The moss-rose - - - Flo. 105 

Kubla-Khan ; or a vision in a dream - - Col. 207 

Kwasind, Death of - - - - - - Lon. 182 

Kyrie Eleison ------- p ro . 372 

L , To - ' Byron 255 

L. ; A. C, Sonnet to ------ Low. 19 

La bella mano — two sonnets - Ros. 305 

La belle dame sans merci— a ballad - - - Keats 240 

La grisette - - Hoi. 78 

Labe Maculisque, De - - - - - - Her. 568 

Labeculas, maculas-que nobis objicis - - Her. 568 

Labor and rest. (Mulock.) - . Fav. 410 

— we delight in physics pain - - - Sha. 795 

— Songs of - Whi. 112 

— with what zeal we will - Lon. 227 
Laborer's noon- day hymn, The - - - - Wor. 433 

La Chaudeau, At Lon. 412 

Lachin Y. Gair ------ Byron 158 

Lachlan, War-song of Scott 394 

Lacking my love, I go from place to place - Spe. 700 

Lacy, c. in The Borderers - Wor. 43 

Ladder of St. Augustine, The - Lon. 212 

Laddie, lie near me," Remarks on - - Burns 328 

Laddies by the banks o' Nith — a song - Burns 219 

Ladies and knights and arms - - - Scott 415 

— eyes, To ------ Moore 259 

— in the court, Sonnet to the - - - Spe. 28 

— passion for leveling distinction in dress - Gol. 443 
Lady ! a pen (perhaps with thy regard - - Wor. 459 

— by yonder blessed moon - Sha. 720 

— Clara Vere de Vere ----- Ten. 41 

— Clare Ten. 112 

— fern. (Campbell.) Flo. 116 

— Franklin. (E. W. H.) ... - Whi. 396 

— G-eraldine's courtship ----- Bro. 580 

— H , To, on an old ring - - - - Moore 206 



Lady 0Q9 

Landon ^° w 

Lady Heron's song. (Lochinvar.) - - - Scott 85 

— how can it chance — yet this we see - - Lon. 393 

— I rifled a Parnassian cave - - - Wor. 237 

— I thank thee for thy loveliness - - - Eos. 241 

— in the chemisette - - - - - - Wil. 189 

— in the white dress ----- Wil. 188 

— it cannot be but thine eyes — a sonnet - - Cow. 598 

— Jane — a humorous novel in verse - - Wil. 117 

— let the rolling drums Ten. 392 

— Letter to a, 1794 Burns 494 

— Mary Ann— a song - - - - . - Burns 247 

— of castle Windeck, The - - - - - Bry. 157 

— of heaven and earth Eos. 138 

— of Provence, The Hem. 206 

— ofShalott Ten. -23 

— - of the castle ------ -Hem. 392 

— of the earl (anon.) - - - - - Fav. 202 

— of the lake, The - - - - - . - Scott 107 

— on her departure for India, To a - - Hood 605 

— Onlie — a song ------ Burns 205 

— singing to her lute ----- Pope 443 

— sleeping, To a - - - - - - - Ten. 471 

— that in the prime of earliest youth - - Mil. 475 

— thou weepest for the maniac's woe - White 312 

— To a - - - - Byron 137, 144, 166, 172, 230 

— To a, offended ------- Col. 215 

— To a, on her singing - - - - - Moore 100 

— To a, on leaving England - - - Byron 232 

— To a, with Falconer's Shipwreck - - Col. 161 

— To a, with manuscript poems - - Moore 69 

— weeping, To a - - - - - - Byron 253 

— where'er you roam, whatever beam - Moore 127 

— who lived one hundred years, On death of a Cow. 604 

— wouldst thou heiress be - - - - - Hood 147 

— See also surnames in general alphabet. 

Lady's album, In a - - - - - Byron 264 

— coach, Epigram pinned to a - - Burns 183 

— common-place book, In a - - - Moore 75 

— dream, The - - - - - - Hood 126 

— pocketbook, Epigram written in a - Burns 183 

— "yes," The - - - - - - - Bro. 287 

Laertes, son of Polonius, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 

Lafayette, marquis de, Sonnet to - - - Col. 96 

Lafeu, an old lord, c. in All's Well - - - Sha. 254 

Laighton, Albert. Found dead - - - Fav. 65 

Joe - - Fav. 151 

Lake and fairy-boat Hood 144 

— of Geneva Eog. 11 

— of the Dismal Swamp — a ballad - - Moore 126 

— Eegillus, Battle of the Mac. 56 



O Q Q Lady 

^ 0d Landou 

Lake side, The Whi. 139 

— storm, The ------- She. 556 

— The - - ----- - Poe 167 

— The; or, Edwin Morris - - Ten. 75 
Lalla Rookh— an oriental romance - - Moore 356 
L'AUegro -------- Mil. 421 

Lamartine, Alphonse de - - - - - Low. 101 

— Hymns from French of - - - - - Whi. 88 
Lamb, Charles, On death of - - - - Wor. 495 
Lament, A Burns 80, 198; Scott 157; She. 440; Whi. 135 

— for Adonis - - Bro. 139 

— for Diocletian's fiery sword - Wor. 355 

— for James, earl of Glencairn - - - Burns 135 

— for the summer, A - Pro. 90 

— him, Mauchline husbands - - - - Burns 176 

— in rhyme, lament in prose - - - Burns 36 

— lament, Sir Isaac Heard - Moore 631 

— of Ceres Sch. 129 

— of Lly warch Hen - Hem. 243 

— of Mary, queen of Scots - Burns 135 ; Wor. 107 

— of Tasso, The Byron 206 

— who will, in fruitless tears - Bry. 75 
Lamentation - - Ing. 395 

— of Glumdalclitch Pope 392 

Lamentations, On passage in the W es. 289 

Lamia - Keats 140 

L'amitie est l'amour sans ailes - - - Byron 169 

Lamp's shrine, The— a sonnet - Ros. 244 

Lancaster, Duke of, uncle to king, c. in Rich. ii. Sha. 356 

— John of, son of Henry iv. , c. in Henry iv. , pt. 1 Sha. 382 

— castle, In view of — a sonnet - - - Wor. 442 
Lance, shield and sword relinquished - - Wor. 358 
Lancelot Blackthorne, c. in Doom of Devorgoil Scott 524 
Lancte pater, cceli custos, quo doctius uno - Her. 559 
Land of dreams, The - - - Bry. 215 ; Hem. 233 

— of lost gods and godlike men - - Byron 300 

— where the banners wave last in the sun - Hoi. 155 
Landing of the pilgrim fathers - Hem. 416 
Landlady, count the la win — a song - - Burns 216 
Landlord, The ------- Low. 62 

Landlord's tale, The ----- Lon. 235, 314 

Landmark, The — a sonnet - Ros. 260 

Landon, Letitia E. Apple blossoms - - Flo. 33 

Banquet, The Fav. 318 

Bonds of affection Fav. 278 

Can you forget me ? Flo. 92 

Cowslip, The Flo. 29 

Drooping willow : Flo. 145 

Legacy of the roses ... - Flo. 106 

Narcissus, The Flo. 52 



Landon 98 J. 

Laurel ^°* 

Landon, Letitia E. Sunflower, The - - Flo. 148 

Violets - Flo. 42 

from F. D. Hemans - Bro. 268 

her last question ----- Bro. 287 

Landor, Walter Savage. Maid's lament - Fav. 336 

Land's End, At the Wes. 17 

Langhorne. Evening primrose - - Flo. 110 

Laoctonas, c. in (Edipus Tyrannus - - - She. 323 

Laodamia -------- Wor. 191 

La Perouse's voyages, On a blank leaf of - Cam. 277 
Lapraik, John, Epistles to - - Burns 152, 153, 158 

Lapse of time, The - - - - - Bry. 75 

La Pucelle (Joan of Arc), c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 

Lara, Count of, c. in Spanish Student - - Lon. 44 

Lara — a tale ------- Byron 50 

Larcom, Lucy. Strip of blue - Fav. 428 

Large was his bounty and his soul sincere - Fav. 34 

Lars Porsena of Clusium ----- Mac. 34 

Larvse. (Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.) - - Fav. 440 

Larvata Gorgone, De - - - - - - Her. 561 

Laska, steward, c. in Zapolya - - - Col. 250 

Lass of Ballochmyle, The — a song - - Burns 202 

— of Ecclef echan, The — a song - - - Burns 275 

— of Livingston," The - Burns 299 

— of Patie's mill," Eemarks on - Burns 300 

— that made the bed to me— a song - Burns 274 

— when your mither is frae hame - - Burns 212 
Lassie, lend me your braw hemp heckle - Burns 339 

— wi 1 the lint white locks — a song - - Burns " 266 
Last autumnal walk. (Wm. P. Palmer.) - Flo. 283 

— banquet of Antony and Cleopatra - - Hem. 104 

— blossom, The ------ Hoi. 170 

— braw bridal, The — fragment of a song Burns 269 

— buccaneer, The Mac. 197 

— charge, The - - Hoi. 219 

— confession, The ------ Ros. 41 

— Constantine, The Hem. 283 

— day, The P. of F. 73 

— farewell, The Erne. 222 

— fire— a sonnet Ros. 241 

— interview, The ------ Mer. 430 

— leaf, The ------ - Hoi. 1 

— look, The. (W.W.Swain.)- - - - Hoi. 145 

— man, The ----- Cam. 164 ; Hood 525 

— May a braw wooer — a song - - - Burns 285 

— message, The ------ Mer. 209 

— night, as lonely o'er my fire I sat - Moore 598 

— night I tossed and turned in bed - - Moore 321 

— night, just as the tints of the autumn sky - Whi. 198 

— night, when weary silence fell on all - Pro. 147 



9 o K Landon 

^°° Laurel 

Last night, without a voice that vision spake - Wor. 372 

— of all the Romans - - - " - Sha. 786 

— of the flock, The Wor. 109 

— reader, The Hoi. 12 

— remonstrance, The Mer. 232 

— rites Hem. 353 

— rose of summer. (Moore.) - Flo. 103 

— sermon of the prophets - - - - P. of F. 167 

— sonnet - Keats 249 

— supper, The. (Da Vinci.) - Wor. 300 

— The P.ofF. 142 

— three from Trafalgar — a sonnet - - Ros. 297 

— time I came o 7 er the moor— a song - Burns 252, 299 

— time that I met lady Ruth - - - Mer. 245 

— tournament, The ------ Ten. 519 

— verse of Charles Wesley ... - Wes. 58 

— walk in autumn, The Whi. 208 

— week, dear N , making merry - - Moore 309 

— wish, The ... - Hem. 430; Wes. 359 

— words - Mer. 473 

Lastly I saw an ark of purest gold - - - Spe. 580 

Late crippled of an arm, and now a leg - Burns 174 

— spring. (Southey.) Flo. 449 

— when the autumn evening fell - - - Scott 391 
Later poems - - - - - - - Whi. 208 

Lathmon - - Oss. 358 

Latimer and Ridley — a sonnet - Wor. 369 

Latin and Greek poems Her. 536 

— verses— Epitaphs in Gray's elegy - - She. 554 
Latitudinarianism — a sonnet - - - Wor. 372 

Latter-day warnings Hoi. 168 

Laud, Archbishop, c. in Charles the First - She. 484 

a sonnet Wor. 371 

Laud the first spring daisies - - - - Flo. 412 

Laugh of the mountain ! — lyre of bird and tree ! Lon. 17 

Laughingly thou comest - - - - Flo. 459 

Launcelot, a clown, c. in Two Gent, of Verona Sha. 21 

— and Guinever, Parting of - - - - Mer. 434 

— and queen Guinever ----- Ten. 114 

— Goffo, a clown, c. in Merchant of Venice Sha. 181 
Launch of a first-rate ----- Cam. 316 

— thy bark, mariner Fav. 331 

Laura, by G. Turnbull - Burns 542 

— in thy golden gaze ----- Sch. 28 

— Poems to Sch. 22, 2Q, 313 

— To, at the harpsichord ... - Sch. 24 

— W , To (two years old.) - Wil. 285 

Laurance - Ing. 227 

Laurel, Poesy of the Flo. 150 

— The. (Tasso.) Flo. 152 



Laurel 9 o a 

Leggett ^°° 

Laurel, The. (Wordsworth.) - Flo. 154 

Laurels may nourish round the conqueror's Cow. 483 

— The "—20th anniversary - Whi. 356 
Laurence, a Franciscan friar, c. in R. and J. Sha. 712 
Laurustinus, The. (James Montgomery.) - Flo. 298 

Laus Deo - . - Whi. 316 

Lavalette, Madame ----- Byron 236 

Laverna, Cuckoo at Wor. 315 

Lavinia, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

Law. (Professions.) ----- Cra. 351 

— of life— an aphorism Lon. 94 

— on one's side, The - - - - . - Moore 332 

— The - - - - - - - - - Wes. 173 

La wes, H., Sonnet to Mil. 477 

Lawgivers, To ------ - Sch. 259 

Lawn as white as driven snow - - - Sha. 321 

Lawrence, Mr. , Sonnet to - - - - - Mil. 480 

Lawrie, Archibald, Letter to - - - - Burns 357 

— Eev. a., Letter to Burns 366 

Laws create a habit of self-restraint - - Rog. 110 

Lay down the ax ; fling by the spade - - Bry. 263 

— her i' the earth, and from - Sha. 842 

— not that flattering unction - Sha. 833 

— of old time - - Whi. 214 

— of poor Louise - - - - - - Scott 454 

— of the brown rosary Bro. 234 

— of the early rose Bro. 273 

— of the imprisoned huntsman - Scott 158 

— of the laborer - Hood 132 

— of the last minstrel Scott 1 

— on Macduff, and ------ Sha. 809 

— preaching Wes. 170 

Lays of ancient Rome - - - Mac. 31 ; Fav. 345 

— of many lands - - ' - - - - Hem. 123 

Lazarus and Mary Wil. 54 

Lazy laughing languid Jenny - - - Ros. 70 

— mist, The— a song Burns 213 

Leader astray, The - P. of F. 66 

— haughs and Yarrow," Remarks on - Burns 327 

— of armies, Israel's God - Hoi. 299 

— of those armies bright ----- Mil. 22 
Leaf from tomb of Virgil - - - Hem. 324 

— The - - - - Ros. 143 

Leafless are the trees ; their purple branches Lon. 220 

— hours Mer. 255 

Leagues north, as fly the gull and auk - Whi. 310 

Leander, Hero and Sch. 145 

— On a picture of — a sonnet - - - - Keats 247 
Leap of Roushan Beg, The ... - Lon. 377 
Lear, king of Britain, c. in King Lear - - Sha. 847 



nc*7 Laurel 

^°< Leggett 

Lear — a sonnet - - Hood 181 

Learn of the little nautilus to sail - - Pope 206 

— to win a lady's faith Bro. 287 

— ye nations of the earth - Cow. 572 
Learned boy, The Cra. 207 

— shepherd, To the ----- Spe. 24 
Leave her to heaven and to those thorns - Sha. 818 

— lady ! in your glass of crystal clean - Spe. 695 

— me, fear, thy throbs are base - - - Eme. 292 

— me, oh ! leave me ! — unto all below - - Hem. 228 

— my loneliness unbroken - Poe 57 

— not a rack behind ----- Sha. 16 

— now our streets and in your place behold - Cra. 402 

— the world no copy ----- Sha. 285 

— us not, man of prayer ! - - - - - Wil. 85 

— we the pedants to quarrel and strive - Goe. GO 
Leaves and rain and the days of the year - Eos. 285 

— have their time to fall - Hem. 358 

— of lign aloes, The ------ Ing. 511 

Leaving school, On - - - - - - Wor. 15 

— the matter open — a tale - Low. 164 
Le Beau, a courtier, c. in As You Like It - Sha. 205 
Lechdale churchyard ----- She. 396 
Lecointre, c. in Fall of Eobespierre - - Col. 382 
Led by my hand he sauntered Europe round - Pope 174 

— by the light of the Mseonian star - - Pope 58 
Ledbury, St. Catherine of — a sonnet - - Wor. 239 
Lee, Mr., To ---.--- - Dry. 273 

— M. E. Bouquet of primroses - - - Flo. 67 

— shore, The ------ - Hood 168 

Left to myself I wander as I will - - - Lon. 349 

Legacies — H. S. Boyd — a sonnet - - - Bro. 93 

Legacy of the roses ------ Flo. 106 

— The -------- Moore 220 

Legend, A Goe. 230; Pro. 431 

— beautiful Lon. 286 

— of Bregenz ------- Pro. 115 

— of Brittany ------- Low. 27 

— of Jubal Eliot 5 

— of Lord Rosencrantz ----- Mer. 275 

— of Navarre ------- Hood 503 

— of Provence Pro. 203 

— of Rabbi Ben Levi - Lon. 242 

— of St. Mark - Whi. 142 

— of the cross-bill ------ Lon. 93 

— of the Delawares - - Bry. 332 

— of the horse-shoe Goe. 245 

Legendary poems Whi. 2Q 

Legendre, c. in Fall of Robespierre - - - Col. 382 

Leggett, Wm. , In memory of Bry. 193 



Leggett's 288 

Leggett's monument — a sonnet - - - Whi. Ill 

Legion of honor," On the star of - - - Byron 260 

Leighton, c. in Charles the First - - - She. 483 

Leisure to be sick Sha. 401 

Lelio, c. in Magico Prodigioso - She. 540 

Leman, Lake, Sonnet to - Byron 264 

Lemures, c. in Faust ----- Faust 170 

Lend, lend your wings ! I mount - - - Pope 359 
Lending a punch-bowl - - - Hoi. 30 ; Fav. 104 

Lennox, a chief, c. in Haliclon Hill - - Scott 462 

— a nobleman, c. in Macbeth - - - Sha. 788 

— c. in The Borderers - - - ... Wor. 43 
Lenore --------- Poe 58 

Lent ----- Her. 174 

L'entresol, A Mer. 213 

L'envoi - - - - Goe. 412; Her. 305; Lon. 25 

— de Chaucer - - Cha. 600 

— de Chaucer a Bukton Cha. 595 

— The poet and his songs Lon. 401 

— whither? Albeit I follow - - - - Low. 390 

— whither my heart hath wiser - - - Low. 25 
Leo, c. in Armgart ------ Eliot 36 

Leodogran, the king of Cameliard - - - Ten. 397 

Leofwin, earl of Kent, c. in Harold - - Ten. 615 

Leoline- -------- Mer. 457 

Leonard, a ranger, c. in Doom of Devorgoil Scott 524 

Leonardo, servant of Bassanio, c. in Mer. of V. Sha. 181 

Leonato, c. in Much Ado About Nothing - Sha. Ill 

Leonine, servant of Dionyza, c. in Pericles - Sha. 977 

Leonora singing at Rome, To (Milton. ) - Cow. 571 

Leontes, king of Sicilia, c. in Winter's Tale - Sha. 304 

Leontine, c. in Good-natured Man - - Gol. 178 

Leopold, duke of Brunswick - Goe. 268 

Leper, The ------ - Wil. 49 

Lepidus. M. iEmilius, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 

— — a triumvir, c. in Antony and Cleopatra Sha. 911 
Lepus multis amicis. (Fable of Gay.) - - Cow. 647 

Lerici, In the bay of She. 447 

Lesbia hath a beaming eye - - - Moore 235 

— To - - Byron 132, 142 

Le Sieur de Noailles, embassador, c. in Q. Mary Ten. 537 

Lesson of the war, The Pro. 145 

Lessons from the Gorse - - - Bro. 108 ; Flo. 512 

Lest the bargain should catch cold - - Sha. 948 

— you should think that verse shall die - - Pope 515 
Lesteneth, lordyngs, in good entent - - Cha. 406 
Let all the ends thou aim'st at - - - - Sha. 612 

— all the world in every corner sing - - Her. 136 

— any man once show the world that he feels Mer. 20 

— dull-brained slaves contend - - - Byron 259 



QOQ Leggett's 

- 0if Let 

Let earth and heaven agree ... - Wes. 11 

— earth and hell their powers engage - - Wes. 271 

— Edinburgh critics o'erwhelm with their 

praises ------ Byron 236 

— Erin remember the days of old - - Moore 223 

— every age negotiate for itself - - - Sha. 116 

— fate do her worst ----- Fav. 214 

— folly smile to view the names - - Byron 130 

— foreign nations of their language boast - Her. 269 

— God, the mighty God ----- Wes. 70 

— greener lands and bluer skies - - - Hoi. 79 

— half -starved slaves in warmer skies - Burns 70 

— Hercules himself do what - - - - Sha. 842 

— him look to his bond Sha. 192 

— him who will by force or fraud - - Lon. 413 

— him who would conceive what now I saw Dante 285 

— it be tenable in your silence - - - Sha. 815 

— it serve for table-talk ----- Sha. 197 

— long lived pansies here their scents - - Flo. 48 

— me a moment — ere with fear and hope Moore 585 

— me alone (amazing word) - - - - Wes. 246 

— me confess that we two must be twain — a 

sonnet ------- Sha. 1032 

— me count thy treasures ----- Pro. 66 

— me go where'er I will ----- Erne. 272 

— me have men about me that are fat - - Sha. 766 

— me move slowly through the street - - Bry. 206 

— me my newly-won liberty taste - - - Sen. 344 

— me not to the marriage of true minds - Sha. 1042 

— me resign a wretched breath - - Moore 59 

— me retrace the record of the years - Hoi. 192 

— me ryke up to dight that tear - - Burns 58 

— me sit heavy on thy soul to-morrow ! - Sha. 588 

— me wander where I will. (Turnbull.) Burns 542 

— me wring your heart ----- Sha. 832 

— mine eyes "the farewell say - - - - Goe. 38 

— my deeds be witness of my worth - - Sha. 707 

— my heart be still a moment - - - - Poe 53 

— no care now hover o'er us ! - - Goe. 96 

— no man ask thee of anything - - - Ros. 279 

— no such man be trusted - Sha, 202 

— not ambition mock their useful toil - - Fav. 31 

— not my love be called idolatry — a sonnet Sha. 1040 

— not one spark of filthy lustful fire - - Spe. 701 

— not the heavens hear these tell-tale women Sha. 582 

— not women e'en complain— a song - Burns 2Q6 

— not women's weapons, water drops - - Sha. 861 

— nothing disturb thee ----- Lon. 340 

— other bards of angels sing - Wor. 106 

— other heroes boast their scars - - Burns 105 

19 



Let 
Letters 



290 



Let other poets raise a fracas - - - Burns 65 

— pious Damon take his seat - - \ - - Mac. 159 

— schoolmasters puzzle their brain - - Gol. 281 

— still the woman take an elder - - - Sha. 289 

— Taylor preach, upon a morning breezy - Hood 289 

— the bird of loudest lay ----- Sha. 1054 

— the candied tongue lick -:'---' Sha. 827 

— the charms of the nymph I adore - Burns 330 

— the devil wear black Sha. 828 

— the foeman sorrow o'er his dead - - - Goe. 385 

— the galled jade wince -.-.-'-- Sha. 828 

— the Greek his plastic clay - - - - Goe. 364 

— the living wander where they will - - Rog. 108 

— the stricken deer go weep - Sha. 829 

— the sublime muse, who, wrapt in night - White 315 

— the winds blow and billows roll - - - Wes. 305 

— the world slide - - - - - - Sha. 229 

— the world's sharpness like a clasping knife Bro. 159 

— the yellow mead shine for sons of the 

brave -------- Hem. 244 

— them boast of the country - - - - Flo. 192 

— there be gall enough - - - - - Sha. 293 

— there be light ! " God spake of old - - Whi. 412 

— there be light ! " said God - - - - Mil. 164 

— this house's glory rise Goe. 370 

— those who are in favor with their stars — 

a sonnet - - Sha. 1031 

— those who pine in pride or in revenge - She. 458 

— thy gold be cast in the furnace - - - Pro. 63 

— thy love be younger - - - - - Sha. 289 

— thy wheel-barrow alone - Wor. 144 

— us do or die Burns 257 

— us drain the nectared bowl - Moore 43 

— us lift up the curtain and observe - - Rog. 59 

— us make a leap ------ Hood 179 

— us make now man in our image - - Mil. 171 

— us quit the leafy arbor ----- Wor. 88 

— us then be up and doing - - - - Lon. 3 

— us throw more logs on the fire - - - Pro. 64 

— us weep, in our darkness - - - - Wil. 234 

— us, with a gladsome mind - Mil. 505 

— wits contest ------ Her. 286 

— women, Edward, war with words - - Scott 279 
Let's do it after the Roman fashion - - Sha. 938 

— talk of graves Sha. 369 

Letter, A Pro. 292 

— in verse Scott 388 

— L., The Ing. 88 

— The- Scott 223; Ten. 490 

— to his mother Her. 43 





291 


Let 
Letters 


LETTERS: 








Aiken, Robert, Apr. 3, 1786 Burns 


351 


Chalmers, Margaret, Sept. 26, 


July, 1786 . . . " 

Ainslie, Robt., June 28, 1787 " 


353 


1787 


Burns 381 


378 


Sept. 26, 1787 . 


. " 384 


July, 1787 ..." 


380 


Nov. 21, 1787 . 


388 


Aug. 23, 1787 . . " 


381 


Dec. 12, 1787 


. " 391 


— — Nov. 23, 1787 . . " 


389 


Dec. 19, 1787 . 


391 


— — 1787 .... " 


389 


Dec, 1787 . 


. " 395 


Mar. 3, 1788 . i " 


401 


Feb. 15, 1788 . 


398 


May 26, 1788 . . " 


407 


.... 


. " 398 


June 24, 1788 . . " 


408 


Mar. 14, 1788 . 


403 


June 30, 1788 . 


409 


Apr. 7, 1788 


. " 404 


June 24, 1788 . . " 


409 


Sept. 16, 1788 . 


416 


Jan. 6, 1789 . 


426 


— William, Dec. 27, 1786 


. " 362 


June 8, 1789 . . " 


436 


Charlesworth, To . White 71, 109, 13 


Nov. 1, 1789 . 


442 




140, 153, 202 


1791 . " 


471 


Clarinda Craig 


Burns 562 


Apr. 28, 1793 . 


489 


Clarke, Mr., June 26, 1796 


510 


Alexander,Miss,Nov.l8,1786 " 


358 


— J., July 16, 1792 . 


" 478 


Alison, Rev. Archibald. Feb. 14 




— Samuel, Jun. . 


501 


1791 . . . Burns 


' 464 


Cleghorn, Mr. 


361 


Anderson, Dr., 1790 . 


459 


— Robert, Mar. 31,1788 


. " 403 


Armour, James, July 18, 1796 " 


514 


Constable, Lady W. M., 


Dec. 16, 


Aunt, To his White 


169 


1789 . 


. Burns 445 


Baird, Rev. G., Feb., 1791 Burns 


465 


Jan. 11, 1791 . 


461 


.ballantyne, John, June, 1786 " 


352 


Craig, Clarinda. See Clarinda " 562 


Dec. 13, 1786 . . " 


361 


Craik, Miss, Aug., 1793 . 


490 


Jan. 14, 1787 . . " 


363 


Creech, Wm ., May 1 3, 1 787 " 375 


Jan., 1787 . . " 


364 


May 30, 1789 . 


435 


Feb. 24, 1787 . . " 


367 


Cruikshank, Wm . , June, 1 787 " 378 


Begbie, Miss Eliza, 1783 " 


345 


Mar. 3, 1788 . 


400 


1783 . . . . " 


347 


Aug., 1788 . 

Cunningham, Alexander, 


412 


1783 .... 


347 


May 4, 


1783 . " 


348 


1789. 


Burns 433 


Bengo, Mr., Sept. 9, 1788 
Benson, Miss, Mar. 21, 1793 " 


415 


Feb. 13, 1790 . 


453 


487 


Aug. 8, 17'90 . 


458 


Blacklock, Dr., Nov. 15, 1788 " 


422 


Jan. 23, 1791 


463 


Blair, Hugh, May 3, 1787 . " 


374 


Mar. 12, 1791 . 


467 


Brice, David, June 12, 1786 " 


3;2 


June 11, 1791 . 


469 


July 26, 1786 . . " 


355 


Sept. 10, 1792 . 


479 


Brown, Richard, Dec. 30. 1787 " 


394 


Mar. 3, 1793 


486 


Feb. 15, 1788 . ' . " 


397 


Feb. 26, 1794 . 


497 


Feb. 24, 1788 . 


399 


July 7, 1796 


511 


Mar. 7, 1788 . . " 


401 


— Lady E., Sept., 1791 . 


471 


Mar. 26, 1788 . 


403 


Dalrymple, James, 1787 


389 


May 21, 1789 . . " 


434 


Dalzel, Alex., Mar. 19, 179 


L " 467 


Nov 4, 1789 . 


443 


Dashwood, John 


White 152 


- Samuel, May 4, 1789 . " 


434 


Davies, Miss, Dec, 1788 . 


Burns 423 


Buchan, Earl of, Feb., 1787 " 


368 





472 


June, 1791 ..." 


470 


Dunbar, Wm., Mar., 1787 


369 


Jan. 12, 1794 . 


494 


Apr. 7, 1788 


404 


Burns, to George Thomson " 


514 


Jan. 14, 1790 . 


449 


— Gilbert, Sept. 17, 1787 


383 


Jan. 17, 1791 


461 


Jan. 11, 1790 . . " 


449 


— Col. W. 


505 


July 10, 1796 . 


511 


Dunlap, Mrs., July, 1786 . 


354 


— Jean, to Mr. Burness . " 

— Mrs. Robert 


513 


Jan. 15, 1787 . 


364 


512 


Mar. 22, 1787 . 


371 


— William, Mar. 25, 1789 


432 


Apr. 15, 1787 . 


373 


Burness, James, June 21, 1783 " 


344 


Apr. 30, 1787 . 


" 374 


Feb. 17, 1784 . . " 


348 


Jan. 21, 1788 . 


396 


Aug., 1784 


349 


Feb. 12, 1788 


397 


Sept, 26, 1786 . . " 

Feb. 9, 1789 . . " 


357 


Mar. 17, 1788 . 


40S 


428 


Apr. 28, 1788 . 

May 4, 1788 . 


405 


July 12, 1796 . . " 


512 


406 


to Mrs. Burns . " 


513 


May 27, 1788 


407 


— William, Dec. 27, 1771 . " 


342 


June 13, 1788 . 


407 


Candlish, Jas.,Mar.21, 1787 " 


369 


Aug. 2. 1788 


413 


1787 . " 


377 


Aug. 10, 1788 . 


413 


Captain ■, Dec. 5, 1793 " 


493 


Aug. 16, 1788 . 


414 


Carfrae, Rev. P., Mar., 1789 " 


430 


Sept. 27, 1788 . 


418 



Letters 






2 


92 




Life 








Dunlap, Mrs., Nov. 13, 1788 Burns 


421 


Johnson. Jas., May 3, 1787 Burns 


374 


Dec. 17, 1788 . 


" 


423 


Nov. 15, 1788 . . " 


422 


Jan. 1, 1789 




it 


424 


1794 .... 


500 


Mar. 4, 1789 




u 


429 


July 4, 1796 . . " 


510 


Apr. 4, 1789 




" 


433 


Johnston,Capt.,Nov.l3,1792 " 


482 


June 21, 1789 




" 


437 


Kennedy, John, Mar. 3, 1786 " 


350 


— — Sept. 6, 1789 




" 


440 


Apr. 20, 1786 . 


351 


Dec. 13, 1789 




" 


444 


May 17, 1786 . . " 


352 


Jan. 25, 1790 


. 


it 


450 


— — Aug., 1786 . . " 


356 


Apr. 10, 1790 




" 


455 


— Miss . . . . " 


490 


Aug. 8, 1790 




K 


458 


Lady, To a, 1794 . 


494 


Nov., 1790 




IE 


461 


Lawrie, Archibald, Nov. 13, 1786 




Feb. 7, 1791 




" 


464 


Burns 


357 


Apr. 11, 1791 




" 


468 


— , Rev. G., Feb. 5, 1787 


366 


Dec. 17, 1791 




" 


473 


Lewars, J., to Mr. Burness " 


513 


Aug. 22, 1792 




" 


478 


Lockhart, Geo.. July 18, 1788 " 


410 


Sept. 24, 1792 




It 


481 


Lofft, Capel, To-. . . White 


144 


Sept., 1792 




" 


482 


Logan, John, Aug. 7, 1789 Burns 


439 


Dec. 3, 1792 




" 


483 


M n, Miss, Nov., 1787 . " 


388 


Dec. 31, 1792 




" 


484 


Macaulay, Mr., June 4, 1789 " 


435 


Jan. 5. 1793 




" 


485 


Macculloch, David, June 21, 1794 




June 25, 1794 




■' 


499 


Burns 


499 


Dec. 15, 1795 




" 


503 


Mackenzie, Dr., Nov., 1786 


360 


Dec. 20, 1795 




" 


506 


M'Lehose, Mrs. See Clarinda " 


562 


Jan. 31, 1796 




" 


509 


M'Murdo, Mr., June 10, 1789 " 


437 


July 12, 1796 




" 


512 


— John, Aug. 2, 1790 . . " 


458 


Editor, Letter to an . 


White 


102 


Dec, 1793 


492 


— of Morning Chron. 1795 


Burns 


504 


1793 . ll 


493 


Eglinton, Earl of, Jan., V 


87 " 


363 


— Mrs., May 2, ~u6d . " 


433 


Erskine, John Francis, 


Apr. 13 
Burns 




M'Whinnie,Mr.,Apr.l7,1786 " 


351 


1793 


487 


Maddock, B., To White 82, 85, 96 


105 


Ferguson's headstone, C 


)n, Mar 




147, 158, 165, 170, 188 


199 


1787 


Burns 


370 


Maxwell, Provost, Dec. 20, 1789 




Findlater, Alex. 


" 


504 


Burns 


446 


Fontenelle, Miss, 1795 . 


" 


502 


Miller, Patrick, April, 1793 " 


487 


Fullarton, Col., Oct. 3, 17< 


)1 " 


471 


. . . . . " 


494 


Geddes, Bishop Alex., 


Feb. 3 




— Peter, Jr., Nov., 1794 . " 


500 


1789 . 


Burns 


428 


Miss -, To . . . "349,497 


Glencairn, Earl of, Feb., 1' 


'87 " 


3)7 


Mitchell, Collector, 1790 . " 


456 


Dec, 1787 


" 


3;x> 


Montague, Mrs. Basil. See Ben 




May, 1794 . 




498 


son .... Burns 


487 


— Lady .... 


" 


491 


Moore, Dr., Jan., 1787 . 


365 


Gracie, James, July 16, 17 


96 " 


513 


Feb. 15, 1787 . . " 


366 


Graham, Robert . 


" 


412 


Apr. 23, 1787 . 


373 


Dec. 9, 1789 


" 


443 


Aug. 2, 1787 . . " 


380 


Dec, 1792 


" 


484 


Jan. 4, 1789 . 


425 


Mrs., Jan., 1791 . 


" 


462 


Mar. 23, 1789 . . " 


431 


Grose, Francis, 1792 


" 


476 


July 14, 1790 . . " 


457 


1792 . 


" 


476 


Feb. 28, 1791 . . " 


465 


Hamilton, Gavin, Dec 7, 1 


786 " 


380 


Morrison. Mr., Sept. 22, 1788 " 
Mother, To his White 124, 132, 149 


418 


Jan. 7, 1787 


" 


362 


, 164 


Mar. 8, 1787 . 


" 


368 


174, 187 


, 191 


Aug. 28, 1787 . 


" 


382 


Mr. , To, Sept., 1789 Burns 


437 


Dec, 1787 


" 


395 


Muir, Robt., Mar. 20, 1786 


351 


— James, May 26, 1789 


" 


435 


Sept., 1786 ..." 


35:5 


Harris, M., To 


White 


73 


Nov. 18, 1786 . 


359 


Hay, Charles, Dec. 1787 


Burns 


391 


Dec. 20, 1786 . . " 


351 


— Mrs. Lewis. See CI 


lalmers 




— — Aug. 26, 1787 . 


381 


Margaret . 


Burns 


384 


Mar. 7, 1788 . . " 


401 


Heron, Mr., 1795 . 




505 


Murdoch, John, Jan. 15, 1783 " 


343 


Hill, Peter . 




410 


July 16, 1790 . . " 

Neville, To his brother White 5 


457 


Oct. 1, 1788 . 




419 


7, 75 


Apr. 2, 1789 




432 


87, 128, 133, 143, 160, 171, 182 


185 


Feb. 2, 1790 . 




451 


190, 196 


,204 


Mar. 2, 1790 




454 


Nicol, W., June 1, 1787 Burns 


375 


Jan. 17, 1791 . 




462 


June 18, 1787 . . " 


376 


Feb. 5, 1792 




475 


June, 1787 


378 


Hoy, James, Oct. 20, 1787 




385 


Feb. 9, 1790 . . " 


452 


Nov. 6, 1787 




387 


Feb. 20, 1792 . . " 


475 


In the name of the nine 




359 


Patison. Mr., May 17, 1787 " 


375 


James, To his brotl 


ler "W 


r hite 117 


,154 


Pitt, William ..." 


507 



293 



Letters 
Life 



Plumtre, J., To . . . White 


172 


Provost of Dumfries . Burns 


508 


Raleigh, Sir Walter, To . Spe. 


21 


Richmond, John, Feb. 17, 1786 




Burns 


350 


July 9, 1786 . . " 


355 


July 30, 1786 . 


3)6 


July 7, 1787 . . " 

Riddel, Capt. Robert, Oct. 16, 1780 


3S0 




Burns 


441 


1789 ...-." 


442 


_ " 


579 


— Mrs. . . Burns 493, 495 


496 


1795 .... Burns 


501 


1795 . " 


502 


June 4, 1796 . 


509 


Jan. 20, 1796 . . " 


509 


Rose, Mrs., of Kilravock " 


398 


Rough, Sergt., To White 104, 125 
Scotch distillers, Address to 


141 




Burns 


507 


Sharpe, Charles, 1790 or 1791 " 


448 


Sinclair, Sir John, 1790 . " 


447 


Sister, To his . . White 


183 


Skinner, Rev. John, Oct. 25, 




1787 .... Burns 


3S6 


Feb. 14, 1788 . 


397 


Sloan, Thomas, Sept. 1, 1791 " 


470 



Letters- ----- 

— an epigram 

— on literature, On the author of 

— supposed to be written by a 

councilman— an essay 

— The ----- - 

— written at Cambridge - 
Letting "I dare not " wait upon - 
Leviticus, On passages in - 
Lewars, J. Letter to Mr. Burness 

— Jessie, Epitaph for 

On recovery of — an epigram 

To 

Lewes, Lee, Epilogue spoken by - 

Lewie Gordon, 1 ' Eemarks on - 

Lewtie, or Circassian love-chant - 

Lexington, 1775 - 

Ley, Margaret, Sonnet to 

Liberty - Burns 144; She. 433; Tho. 197 

— and order — sonnets Wor. 

— Ode to She. 

— Ode to assert ors of She. 

— Tree of Burns 

— Union and Hoi. 

Liberty's in every blow I - - Burns 

Library, The - Cra. 221; Whi. 

Lida, To — a song Goe. 

Lie here without a record of thy worth - Wor. 
Lieutenant of Aufidius, c. in Coriolanus - - Sha. 
Life (anon.) - Fav. 



Smellie,Wm.,Jan.2, 1792 Burns 474 
Smith, James, 1786 . . " 355 

June 11, 1787 . . " 376 

June 30, 1787 . . " 378 

June, 1787 . . " 378 

. Apr. 28, 1788 . " 405 

Star, Editor of, Nov. 8, 1788 " 420 
Stewart, Prof. Dugald, May 3, 

1788 ... Burns 406 

Jan. 20, 1789 . " 427 

— Mrs., of Stair, Nov., 1786 " 358 
Swann, K, To White 108, 112, 127, 131 
Sylvander (pseud.). See Cla- 

rinda .... Burns 562 
Syme, John . . . " 496 
Tait, Crawford, Oct. 15, 1790 " 459 
Tennant. John, Dec. 22, 1788 " 424 
Thompson, P., To White 167, 180 

Thomson, Geo. to Burns Burns 514 

To . . . Burns 400, 460 

To , Mar., 1791 . . Burns 468 

Tytler, A. F., Feb., 1791 " 463 

Walker, Mr., Sept. 5, 1787 " 383 
West, Mrs., To . White 175 

Whitefoord, John, Dec, 1787 

Burns 392 
Williams, Miss, Dec, 1787 " 393 
Aug., 1789 . "438 

White 57 

- Erne. 188 

- Cow. 438 
common 

- Gol. 524 
Ten. 245 

- Her. 492 

- Sha. 792 

- Wes. 184, 247 

- Burns 513 
Burns 

- Burns 

- Burns 148 
Gol. 

Burns 
Col. 

Whi. 
Mil. 

Wor. 



Hoi. 29: 



188 
188 
188 
149 
313 
150 
409 
475 
450 
438 
420 
416 
144 
158 
257 
412 
65 
420 
654 
165 



Life OQJ. 

Like - y 4 

Life - - Bro. 91; Bry. 174; Byron 261; Her. 183 

— (Charles Mackay.) ----- Flo. 469 

— and death ------- p r0 . 61 

— and death. (Ben Jonson.) - - - Fav. 298 

— and love Bro. 144 

— and thought have gone away - - - Ten. 18 

— beyond, The P. of F. 129 

— clock, The (anon.) ----- Fav. 208 

— Departure from ------ Sch. 249 

— Fragments on Erne. 287 

— Guides of - - Sch. 246 

— Hours of — a sonnet-sequence - - - Eos. 225 

— Human -------- Eog. 183 

— Ideal and Sch. 189 

— in death and death in life - - - - Pro. 168 

— in love — a sonnet ----- Ros. 244 

— is a shuttle - - - - - - - Sha. 64 

— is as tedious as a twice-told tale - - Sha. 345 

— rounded with a sleep ----- Sha. 16 

— like a dome of many-colored glass - - She. 374 

— Love of, increased with age — an essay - Gol. 440 

— Measure of. (Bailey.) - Fav. 253 

— ne'er exulted in so rich a prize - - Burns 134 

— of Alexander Pope - - - - - Pope 7 

— of Blaney ------- Cra. 409 

— of life! thy lips enkindle - - - - She. 239 

— Poetry of - - - - - - - Sch. 281 

— Shortness of - - - ' - - Cow. 611 

— stands still and settles like a fountain - Wil. 305 

— that is, The - - - - - - - Bry. 240 

— the beloved — a sonnet ----- Ros. 274 

— the blessed ------- Bry. 140 

— we've been long together - - - - Fav. 422 

— which all can take but none can give L. of A. 93 

— which ye prize is long-drawn agony - L. of A. 154 

— with yon lambs, like day, is just begun Wor. 247 
Life's but a walking shadow - Sha. 808 

— good-morning. (Anna L. Barbauld.) - Fav. 422 

— morning, noon and evening. (L. M. D.) - Fav. 260 

— parting beams were in his eye - - - Hem. 337 

— progress, Rhapsody of Bro. 95 

Lifetime, A - Bry. 336 

Lift again the stately emblem - - - - Whi. 68 

— not the painted vail — a sonnet - - - She. 411 

— me without the tent, I say - - - - Ayt. 194 

— up thine eyes, sweet Psyche ! - - - Wil. 306 
Ligarius, a conspirator, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 
Light and glory of the world, The - - Cow. 71 

— and shade ------- Pro. 283 

— and silvery cloudlets hover - - - G-oe. 69 



295 



Life 
Like 



Light and warmth - Sch. 245 

— as a sunbeam glides along the hills - - Wor. 702 

— as the angel shapes that bless - - Moore 428 

— breezes will ruffle the blossoms - - Moore 465 

— brigade, Charge of the ----- Ten. 252 

— enchanted sunflower ! - - - - - Flo. 149 

— human nature is too highly - Bro. 87 

— lay the earth on Billy's breast - - - Burns 186 

— of Asia, The ------- Arn. 1 

— of life - - - P. of F. 121 

— of stars, The - - . - - - - - Lon. 3 

— of the harem, The ----- Moore 461 

— of those whose dreary dwelling - - - Wes. 60 

— rued false Ferdinand to leave a lonely maid Cam. 191 

— seeking light, doth light ... - Sha. 136 

— shining in darkness - - - - - Cow. 96 

— so low upon earth ------ Ten. 492 

— sounds the harp - - - - - - Moore 104 

— Sura - - P. of F. 181 

— The - - - - - - - -P. ofF. 181 

— the hills ! till heaven is glowing - - - Hem. 249 

— warmth, and sprouting greenness - - Whi 163 
Lighthouse, The ------- Lon. 12S 

Lightly from fair to fair he flew - - - Scott 84 

Like a blind spinner in the sun - - - Fav. 441 

— a bright river of the fields of heaven - Bry. 195 

— a coy maiden, ease ----- Cow. 256 
■ — a dew-drop from the lion's mane - - Sha. 639 

— a fair house built ------ Sha. 51 

— a gale that sighs along - Fav. 178 

— a laverock in the lift ----- l n g. 515 

— a man to double business - - - - Sha. 831 

— a rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear - - - Sha. 718 

— a shadow proves the substance true - Pope 53 

— a shipwrecked sailor tost - Wor. 430 

— a snuffers this loving old dame "- - Moore 645 

— an arrow shot from a Sha. 979 

— an eagle in a dove-cote -'--■- Sha. 687 

— and like — a song ------ Goe. 27 

— April morning clouds that pass - - Scott 62 

— arrow through the archway sprung - - Scott 99 

— as a huntsman after weary chase - - Spe. 698 

— as a ship that through the ocean wide - Spe. 693 

— as the culver, on the bared bough - - Spe. 702 

— as the darling of the summer's pride - - Spe. 584 

— as the waves make toward — a sonnet - Sha. 1035 

— as to make our appetites — a sonnet - - Sha. 1042 

— cold insects multitudinous - - - lng. 443 

— dreary prison walls ----- p r0 . 215 

— eagles when the storm is done - - - Moore 449 



Like 

Little 



296 



Like following life through creatures - - Pope 224 

— fountains of sweet water in the sea - - Ten. 354 

— f our-and-twenty blackbirds in a pye - Byron 316 

— healing sent on wings of sleep - - - Wil. 276 

— him in piety's decay ----- Wes. 275 

— him who trusts to summer skies - - Moore 74 

— labor-laden moon-clouds faint to see - - Eos. 247 

— light through summer foliage - - - Moore 428 

— lilac flame its color glows - - - - Flo. 30 

— morning when her early breeze - - Moore 348 

— music round a planet - Moore 397 

— Niobe, all tears - - - - -' Sha. 814 

— one who meets in Indian groves - - Moore 429 

— one who, on the morn of fight - - - Moore 452 

— one who wraps the drapery of his couch - Bry. 23 

— quills upon the fretful porcupine - - Sha. 817 

— sentinel and nun they keep - - - - Hoi. 2 

— ships that have gone down at sea - - Moore 466 

— some raw sophister that mounts the pulpit Dry. 524 

— some wanton filly sporting - - - Moore 56 

— souls that balance joy and pain - - - Ten. 114 

— the bright lamp that shone in Kildare's - Moore 22Q 

— the dew on the mountain - Scott 130 

— the dry remnant of a garden -flower - Wor. 481 

— the faint exquisite music of a dream - Moore 382 

— the fair plant that from our touch - - Burns 430 

— the ghost of a dear friend dead - - - She. 434 

— the last streak of intense glory - - Moore 410 

— the small tribute of humility - - - Wil. 285 

— the stained web that whitens in the sun - Moore 391 

— the sweet apple which reddens - - - Ros. 141 

— the tribes of Israel ----- Hoi. 221 

— the vulture who on heavy morning - - G-oe. 168 

— thee to die, thou son ! - - - - - Hem. 230 

— threads of silver seen through crystal L. of A. 158 

— torrents from a mountain source - - Ten. 245 

— two cathedral towers these stately pines - Lon. 400 

— unrobed angels in a prophet's trance - Wil. 203 

— vaulters in a circus round - Eme. 275 
Liked not the security ----- Sha. 412 
Lilac of Persia ! tell us some fine tale - - Flo. 175 

— The. (Burns.) ------ Flo. 176 

— The. (L. H. S.) ----- Flo. 175 

— The. (Thomson.) Flo. 175 

Lilian - - Ten. 8 

Lilies. (Leigh Hunt.) Flo. 476 

— Bouquet of. (Wordsworth.) - - - Flo. 161 

Lilith — a sonnet Eos. 158 

Lily and a lute, A Ing. 358 

— and the rose, The Cow. 434 



29r 



Like 
Little 



Lily,Closing. (Tennyson.) - - Flo. 162 

— of France, To the Byron 241 

— of the valley. (Croly.) - - - Flo. 73 

— of the valley, Poesv of the ... Flo. 72 

— The. (Coleridge.)"- ----- Flo. 75 

— The. (James G. Percival.) - - - Flo. 74, 388 

— the, Poesy of - Flo. 160 

Lily's menagerie - - - - - - Goe. 188 

Limberham," Prologue to - - Dry. 487 

Lime-tree bower, This ----- Col. 173 

Limits - Erne. 314 

Limos, King Mer. 270 

Lina, To — a song Goe. 64 

Lincluden abbey, Evening view of - - Burns 125 
Lincoln, Abraham, Death of Bry. 316 
For services in memory of - - - Hoi. 266 

— Bishop of, c. in Henry viii. - Sha. 592 

— Eobertof ------- Bry. 229 

L'Inconnue. (The unknown.) - Hoi. 79 

Lindesay, a baron, c. in MacDufFs Cross - Scott 484 

— a chief, c. in Halidon Hill - Scott 462 
Lines by a clerk - - Hoi. 80 
Linger," I cried, O radiant time! - - - Pro. 343 

— O gentle time ------ p r o. 52 

Lingering fade the rays of daylight - - Pro. 267 

Links with heaven - ----- - Pro. 439 

Lippincott, Sara J. May morning - - - Flo. 433 

List and in memory bear - Goe. 366 

— the winds of March are blowing - - - Wor. 431 

— 'tis a Grecian maid that sings - - - Moore 537 

— to the valorous deeds that were done - - Scott 311 

— 'twas the cuckoo — O with what delight - Wor. 315 

— ye who pass by Lyulph's tower - - - Wor. 409 
Listed into the cause of sin - - - - Wes. 93 
Listen, friends, and I will tell you - - Pro. 250 

— listen, Mary mine ----- She. 410 

— my children, and you shall hear - - - Lon. 235 

— sweet dove unto my song - - - - Her. 142 

— to the muse's lyre Moore 22 

— young heroes ! your country is calling ! - Hoi. 251 
Listening angels ------ p r0 . 264 

Lisy's parting with her cat - Tho. 377 

Literary advertisement - Moore 642 

— and literal ------- Hood 594 

Litheth, and lestneth, and herkneth aright Cha. 127 

Little better than one of the wicked - - Sha. 384 

— bird in the air Lon. 258 

— dogs and all ; Tray, Blanch - - - Sha. 865 

— Ellie sits alone ------ Bro. 113 

— friend, The Bro. 290 



Little OQQ 

Longaville -*'o 

Little grand lama, The - Moore 577 

— I ask ; my wants are few ■ Hoi. 170 

— learning is a dangerous thing - - - Pope 46 

— leaves and flowerets too - Goe. 50 

— longer, A - - - - - - - - Pro. 151 

— man and little soul ----- Moore 335 

— Mattie - Bro. 593 

— more than kin and less than kind - - Sha. 813 

— people of the snow - Brv. 297 

— red rose. (Goethe.) ----- Flo. 349 

— rose. (Blackwood's Magazine.) - . - - Fa v. 320 

— sweet wine of Jurancon - Lon. 412 

— thinks in the field - Erne. 14 ; Fav. 384 

— while, A ------ - Eos. 147 

Liturgy, The — a sonnet ----- Wor. 375 

Live I, so live I ----- - Lon. 94 

— to be the show ------ Sha. 809 

— while you live, my boys - Flo. 104 

— with me and be my love - Sha. 1053 
Lively hope and gracious fear - - - Cow. 85 
Lives like a drunken sailor on a mast - - Sha. 575 

— of great men all remind us Lon. 3 

— there a man whose sole delights - - - Wor. 454 

— there a strain, whose sounds - - - Scott 162 
Living and dead faith, A - - - - - Cow. 90 

— child or pictured cherub - Ing. 188 

— lost, The - - - - - - - - Bry. 168 

— remembrance — a song - Goe. 39 

— temple, The - - - - ■ - - - Hoi. 143 

— water. (Mme. Guyon.) - Cow. 624 
Lloyd, C, To ------ - Col. 61 

— Robert, Epistle to Cow. 42 
Lly warch hen, Lament of - - - - - Hem. 243 
Lo ! as a careful housewife — a sonnet - - Sha. 1045 

— as the wind is, so is mortal life - L. of A. 42 

— Colin, here the place whose pleasant site Spe. 540 

— death has reared himself a throne - - Poe 86 

— I come with joy to do - Wes. 85 

— I the man whose muse whylome did mask Spe. 29 

— I would pour my blood ... - l,. f A. 91 

— in the burning west the craggy nape - - Wor. 305 

— in the orient — a sonnet - Sha. 1029 

— in the painted oriel of the west - - - Lon. 91 

— in the west, fast fades - . - White 281 

— o'er the welkin the tempestuous clouds White 313 

— on high the moon her luster dead - - Sch. 20 

— on the eastern summit - - - White 367 

— Peter in hell's Grosvenor square - - She. 308 

— the fell monster with the deadly sting ! Dante 56 

— the poor Indian ! whose untutored mind Pope 189 



OQQ Little 

* •> * Longaville 

Lo ! 'tis a gala night Poe 82 

— where she stands fixed— a sonnet - - Wor. 248 
Loathe the taste of sweetness - Sha. 398 
Loch Maree, well of Whi. 143 

— na Gair ------- Byron 158 

— Turit, On scaring water-fowl in - - Burns 110 
Lochiel's warning ------ Cam. 143 

Lochinvar — Lady Heron's song - - - Scott 85 

Lockhart, George, Letter to Burns 410 

Locksley hall - Ten. 89 

Lodovico, kinsman of Brabantio, c. in Othello Sha. 879 

Lofft, Capel, Letter to White 144 

a sonnet White 344 

Lofty, c. in Good-natured Man - - - Gol. 178 

Logan braes — a song Burns 253 

— John, Letter to Burns 439 

— major, Epistle to - Burns 165 

— Susan, Miss, To Burns 103 

Logicians refuted, The Gol. 129 

Lombardy, In — a sonnet - Wor. 319 

London, Farewell to Pope 361 

— Residence in — prelude ... - Wor. 544 

— Written in — a sonnet Wor. 272 

Lone flower, hemmed in with snows - - Wor. 236 

— flower, hemmed in with snows - - - Flo. 20 

— on the bleaky hills the straying flock - Burns 111 
Lonely and still are now thy marble halls - Hem. 64 
Long, Edward Noel, To Byron 171 

— favored England ! — a sonnet - Wor. 439 

— had I sought in vain to find - - - Gol. 131 

— has the dew been dried on tree - - - Wor. 314 

— hast thou watched my bed - - - Bry. 242 

— have you my laurels worn - Flo. 151 

— have I seemed to serve thee, Lord - - Wes. 177 

— I followed happy guides - Erne. 79 

— languishing in double malady - - - Spe. 695 

— life. (Crammond Kennedy.) - - - Fav. 68 

— life, my lord, and health - Burns 83 

— lines of cliff breaking Ten. 340 

— Meg and her daughters— a sonnet - - Wor. 409 

— plunged in sorrow I resign - Cow. 641 

— Serpent, Building of the - Lon. 256 

— shalt thou flourish, Windsor ! - - - Cam. 198 

— since, a beam of heaven I had - - - Whi. 339 

— time have human ignorance and guilt - Wor. 581 

— time his pulse hath ceased to beat - - Wor. 490 

— while I sought to what I might compare - Spe. 688 

— white seam, The - - - - - - Ing. 461 

— years ! It tries the thrilling frame - Byron 206 
Longaville, a lord, c. in Love's Labor's Lost Sha. 135 



Longest 
Longfellow 



300 



Longest day, The _..-..-.-- 

LONGFELLOW, HENEY W., Poems of: 



Wor. 88 



Aftermath 


231 


Cambridge, In the churchyard at 214 


Afternoon in February . 
Agassiz, Fiftieth Birthday of . 


87 


Cancioneros. from the Spanish 230 


224 


Canzone from Michelangelo . . 394 


Air, The 


344 


Carillon 76 


Alden, John 


198 


Carmilhan. Ballad of . . .280 


Allah 


392 


Casal Maggiore, Monk of . . 304 


Amalfi 


361 


Castel-Cuille, Blind girl of . . 135 


Angel and the Child, The 


339 


Castle-builder, The ... 229 


Annie of Tharaw .... 


92 


— by the Sea, The .... 23 


Aphorisms, Poetic . 


93 


Castles in Spain .... 373 


April Day, An ... 


6 


Catawba Wine . . . .221 


Arm-chair, From my . 


395 


Celestial Pilot, The ... 17 


Arrow and the Song, The . 


90 


Challenge, The .... 229 


Arsenal at Springfield, The . 


. 78 


- of Thor, The .... 246 


Art and Tact — an aphorism 


94 


Chamber over the Gate . . . 395 


Artist, The— a sonnet 


392 


Changed 229 


At la Chaudeau .... 


412 


Channing, Wm. E., To . . .41 


Atri, Bells of . 


. 273 


Characters: Angelica, a poor girl. 


Auf Wiedersehen 


405 


Spanish Student 44 


Autumn 


7, 91 


— Antiochus. Judas Maccabaeus 324 


— Within 


413 


— Baltasar, innkeeper. 


Avon, To the .... 


409 


Spanish Student 44 


Azrael 


293 


— Bartolome Roman, a young 


Becalmed 


. 402 


gypsy. Spanish Student 44 


Ballad of Carmilhan, The . 


280 


— Beltram Cruzado, count of the 


— of the French Fleet, A 


. 3?6 


gypsies. Spanish Student 44 


Ballads and other poems . 


25 


— Benvenuto Cellini. 


Baron of St. Castine 


. 28S 


Michelangelo 436 


Barreges 


391 


— Bindo Altoviti. " 454 


Basselin, Oliver 


. 217 


— Cardinal, A. Spanish Student 44 


Beatrice 


19 


— Chispa. a servant. " 44 


Beleaguered City, The . 


. 5 


— Claudio Tolommei. 


Belfry of Bruges, The 


77 


Michelangelo 419 


Belisarius 


. 362 


— Dolores, maid of Preciosa. 


Bell of Atri, The .... 


273 


Michelangelo 44 


Bells of Lynn, The . 


. 320 


— Don Carlos, a gentleman of 


— of San Bias .... 


411 


Madrid. . Michelangelo 44 


Best Medicines, The— an aphorism 93 


— Epimetheus. 


Beware! 


23 


Masque of Pandora 344 


Bird and the Ship, The . 


. 22 


— Fra Sebastiano. Michelangelo 424 


Birds of Killingworth, The 


268 


— Francisco, a servant. 


— of Passage—" Black Shadows ' 


» 131 


Spanish Student 44 


— of Passage . 211, 225, 228, 355 


,372 


— Giorgio Vasari. Michelangelo 445 


Bishop Sigurd at Salten Fiord 


254 


— Guaclarrama, Padre Cura of, 


Black Knight, The 


24 


Spanish Student 44 


Blessing the Cornfields . 


. 170 


— Hephaestus. 


Blind Bartimeus .... 


38 


Masque of Pandora 341 


— Girl of Castel-Cuille, The . 


133 


— Hermes. " 342 


Book of Sonnets, A . .364 


,380 


— Hypolito, a student of Alcala. 


Boston— a sonnet . 


383 


Spanish Student 44 


Boy and the Brook, The . 


337 


— Ippolito, Cardinal. 


Bridge, The .... 


85 


Michelangelo 421 


— of Cloud, The .... 


318 


— Jason. . Judas Maccabaeus 324 


Broken Oar, The— a sonnet . 


. 385 


— Jacopo Nardi. Michelangelo 421 


Brook, The 


17 


— Julia Gonzaga. " 415 




239 


— Julius IH, Pope. " 450 


Brooklet, To my .... 


391 


— Lara, Count of. a gentleman of 


Builders, The .... 


. 130 


Madrid. Spanish Student 44 


Building of the Long Serpent . 


256 


— Marcello, Cardinal. 


— of the Ship, The 


. 122 


Michelangelo 452 


Buonarotti (Michelangelo), a play 415 


— Martina, niece of the padre. 


Burial of the Minnisink 


10 


Spanish Student 44 


— of the Poet, The . 


. 401 


— Mother of Seven Sons. 


Burns, Robert .... 


397 


Judas Maccabaeus 326 


By the Fireside 


. 129 


— Nicanor. . " 330 


— the Seaside .... 


122 


— Pancho, alguacil. 


Cadenabbia — Lake of Como . 


. 359 


Spanish Student 44 



301 



Longest 
Longfellow 



Characters: Pandora. M. of P. 341 

— Pedro Crespo, alcalde. 

Spanish Student 44 

— Philip. . Judas Maccabeeus 334 

— Preciosa, a gypsy girl. 

Spanish Student 44 

— Prometheus. 

Masque of Pandora 343 

— Salviati, Cardinal. 

Michelangelo 450 

— Samaritan embassadors. 

Judas Maccabeus 325 

— Sirion. . " 328 

— Titian. . Michelangelo 444 

— Toledo, Archbishop of. 

Spanish Student 44 

— Urbino. . . Michelangelo 4G2 

— Valdesso. . " 427 

— Victorian, a student of Alcala. 

Spanish Student 44 
Vittoria Colonna. Michelangelo 415 



Charlemagne 
Charles, River, To the 
Chaucer— a. sonnet . 
Child Asleep, The 

— To a 

Children .... 

— of the Lord's Supper, The 
Children's Crusade 

— Hour, The .... 

Chimes 

Chorus of the Fates 
Christian Love— an aphorism 
Christmas Bells 

— Carol, A ... 
Chrysaor 



294 



20 

82 
224 

29 
406 
225 
408 
344 

94 
319 
140 
126 



213 

407 

. 381 

277 

. 359 

338 

. 11 

191 

94 

257 

226 

94 

. 401 

91, 393 



he 



Churchyard at Cambridge, In the 214 
Cinque Ports, Warden of the 
City and the Sea . 
Cleaveland, Parker— a sonnet 
Cobbler of Hagenau. The . 
Como, Lake of— Cadenabbia 
Consolation . - . . 
Coplas de Manrique 
Courtship of Miles Standish, 7 
Creeds— an aphorism . 
Crew of the Long Serpent, The 
Cumberland, The . 

Curfew 

Dana, Richard H., Sonnet to 

Dante, Sonnets to 

Day is Done, The .... 87 

— of Sunshine, A . . . 227 

Daybreak 223 

Daylight and Moonlight . .216 
Dead. The 22 

— Christ, The. (Michelangelo.) 466 
Decoration Day .... 408 
Dedication to Michelangelo . 415 

— to Seaside and Fireside . . 121 

— to Ultima Thule . . .394 

Delia 380 

Denmark, National Song of . 21 
Descent of the Muses— a sonnet . 381 
Discoverer of the North Cape, The 222 
Divina Commedia .... 322 
Drinking Song .... 89 
Driving Cloud, To the . . .85 
Dutch Picture, A . . . .373 

Earlier Poems 6 

Edenhall, Luck of ... 28 



Einar Tamberskelver . . .261 
Elected Knight, The ... 29 
Elegiacs .... 398, 409 

Eliot's Oak— a sonnet . . 381 

Elizabeth 299 

Emma and Eginhard . . 295 

Emperor's Bird's-nest, The . . 215 

— Glove, The .... 376 

Enceladus 226 

Endymion 38 

Epimetheus £31 

— House of . . . . 344, 349 
Eumenides, Choruses of the 346, 351 
Evangeline— a tale of Acadie . 95 
Evening Star, The— a sonnet . . 91 

Excelsior 40 

Falcon of Ser Federigo, The . . 237 
Famine, The .... 185 

Fata Morgana 228 

Fiftieth birthday of Agassiz, The 224 
Finales to the Wayside Inn 271, 291, 316 
Fire— a sonnet 39.2 

— of Driftwood, The . . .129 
Fireside and the Seaside, The . 121 
Florence, Old Bridge at . . 368 
Flower-de-Luce . . . .317 

Flowers 4 

Folk Songs 399 

Footsteps of Angels ... 4 

Forsaken 391 

Four by the Clock . . .408 
Four Princesses at Wilna— a son- 
net 384 

— Lakes of Madison . . .409 

— Winds, The .... 144 
Fragments— awake ! arise ! . . 410 
French Fleet, Ballad of the . 376 

— Frcm the 412 

From my Arm-chair . . . 395 

Fugitive, The 336 

Galaxy, The— a sonnet . . 366 
Galbraith, Victor . . . .218 
Garfield, President . . . 408 
Gaspar Becerra . . . .132 

Ghosts, The 183 

Gilbert, Sir Humphrey . . . 127 
Giotto's Tower .... 321 
Gleam of Sunshine, A . . .78 
Goblet of Life, The ... 39 

God's-Acre 37 

Golden Milestone, The . . 220 
Good Part, The . 42 

— Shepherd, The ... 16 

Grave, The 20 

Gudrun 252 

Hagenau, Cobbler of 277 

Handful of Translations . . 336 
Hanging of the Crane, The . . 352 
Happiest Land, The ... 21 
Haroun Al Raschid . . . 378 
Harvest Moon, The ... 382 
Haunted Chamber, The . . .228 

— Houses 214 

Hawthorne, Nathaniel . . . 319 
Helen of Tyre . . . .397 
Hemlock Tree, The .... 92 
Hermes Trismegistus . . . 402 
Herons of Elmwood, The . . 372 
Hesperus, Wreck of the . . 27 
Hiawatha, Song of . . . . 141 
Holidays— a sonnet . . . 385 



Longfellow 



302 



House of Epimetheus . 


344, 319 


Milton— a sonnet .... 


365 


Hymn for my brother's ordination 135 


Minnisink, Burial of the 


. 10 


— of Moravian Nuns of Bethlehem 8 


Molinos, Three Silences of . 


382 


— to the Night . 


2 


Money— an aphorism 


. 93 


11 Ponte Vecchio di Firenze . 


338 


Monk of Casal-Maggiore . 


304 


Image of God, The . 


17 


Monte Cassino 


360 


In the Garden .... 


346, 350 


Moods— a sonnet .... 


384 


— the Harbor 


. 402 


Moonlight .... 


409 


— Index to Poems . 


. 423 


Moonlight, Daylight and . 
Moravian Nuns, Hymn of 


216 


Interludes, 237, 241, 243, 246, 


263, 267 


8 


275, 277, 279, 283, 287, 293 


295, 298 


Morituri Salutamus . 


354 


304, 309, 


311, 313 


Mothers Ghost. The 


312 


Iron-beard .... 


. 251 


Musician's Tale, The . 246, 280 


,312 


— Pen, The . . . 


. 396 


My Books 


414 


It is not always May 


. 37 


My Cathedral— a sonnet . 


400 


Italy, To. (From Filicaja.) 


. 339 


— Lost Youth .... 


219 


Jewish Cemetery at Newport, 


The 216 


Nameless Grave, A— a sonnet . 


367 


Judas Maccabasus— a play. 


. 324 


Native Land, The . 


17 


Jugurtha 


. 396 


Nature— a sonnet 


380 


Jurancon, "Wine of 


. 412 


Newport, Jewish Cemetery at 


216 


Kambalu 


. 275 


Night^-a sonnet .... 


401 


Kazan, Siege of . 


. 337 


Noel (in Frenci) 


323 


Keats— a sonnet ... 


. 36d 


Norman Baron, The . 


80 


Kemble, Mrs., Readings of —a 


son- 


North Cape, Discoverer of the 


222 


net 


. 134 


Notes to poems .... 
Nuns of Nidaros, The 


405 


Keramos .... 


. 368 


262 


Killed at the Ford . 


. 321 


Nuremberg 

Oaks of Monte Luca. (Michelan 


79 


Killingworth, Birds of 
King Christian 


. 268 




. 21 


gelo.) 


464 


— Olaf and Earl Sigvald . 


. 260 


Occultation of Orion, The 


84 


— Olaf 's Christmas 


. 255 


Odin, Wraith of . 


250 


Death-Drink 


. 262 


Olaf, Saga of King 
Old Age— a sonnet 


246 


— —Return .... 


. 247 


393 


— — War-horns . 


. 260 


— Bridge at Florence, The . 


368 


— Olaf, Saga of 


. 246 


— Clock on the Stairs, The 


89 


— Robert of Sicily 


. 243 


— Danish Song-book, To an . 


88 


— Svend of the Forked Beard 


. 259 


— St. David's at Radnor . 


398 


— Trisanku .... 


. 378 


Oliver Basselin 


217 


— Witlaf 's Drinking-horn 


. 132 


Olympus 


343 


Kwasind, Death of 


. 182 


Open Window, The 


132 


La Chaudeau, At . 


. 412 


Orion, Occultation of . 


84 


Ladder of St. Augustine,The 


. 212 


Ovid in Exile .... 


387 


Landlord's Tale, The . 


235, 314 


Palingenesis 


317 


Law of Life— an aphorism 
Leap of Roushan Beg, The . 




Pandora, Masque of 


341 


. 377 


Parker Cleaveland — a sonnet . 


381 


Legend Beautiful, The 


. 286 


Pau-Puk-Keewis 


176 


— of Rabbi Ben Levi 


. 242 


Paul Revere's Ride 


235 


— of the Cross-bill, The . 




Peace-pipe, The . 


143 


L'Envoi 


. 25 


Pegasus in Pound 


133 


— The Poet and his Songs . 


. 401 


Personal Poems . 


413 


Light of Stars, The . 


. 3 


Phantom Ship, The . 


212 


Lighthouse, The . 


. 128 


Picture-writing 


172 


Little Bird in the Air 


. 258 


Plays: Judas Maccabseus . 


324 


Long Serpent, Building of the . 256 


— Michelangelo . 


415 


Loss and Gain 


. 413 


— Spanish Student 


44 


Love and Friendship .. 
Luck of Edenhall, The . 


. 193 


Poet and his Songs, The (L'Envoi) 


401 


. 28 


Poetic Aphorisms . 


93 


Lynn. Bells of 


. 320 


Poets, The — a sonnet . 


381 


Mad River .... 


. 405 


— Calendar, The 


403 


Madison, Four Lakes of 


. 409 


— Tale, The . . . 268, 283 


,294 


Maiden and Weathercock 


. 399 


Poverty and Blindness— an aphor 




Maidenhood .... 


. 39 


ism 


94 


March of Miles Standish, The 


. 205 


Prelude to Voices of the Night 


1 


Masque of Pandora, The . 
Mayflower, Sailing of the 


. 341 


— to Translations 


412 


. 200 


Preludes to Tales of a Wayside 
Inn . 232,272 




Meeting, The 


. 229 


,292 


Memories 


. 414 


Priscilla 


203 


Michelangelo, Sonnets from 


. 392 


Prometheus . . . . 


211 


— (Buonarotti)— a play . 


. 415 


Psalm of Life, A . . . 


2 


Midnight Mass for the Dying Year 5 


Quadroon Girl, The . 
Queen Sigrid, the Haughty . 


43 


Miles Standish, Courtship of 


. 191 


248 



303 



Longfellow 



Queen Thyri and the Angelica 

Stalks 258 

Quiet Life, A . . . . .413 
Rain in Summer .... 81 
Rainy Day, The . . . .37 
Raud the Strong . . . .254 
Reaper and the Flowers " . 2 

Remorse 340 

Resignation 129 

Restless Heart, The ... 94 
Retribution— an aphorism . . 94 
Revenge of Rain-in-the-Face, The 375 
Rhone, To the River— a sonnet . 382 
Rhyme of Sir Christopher , . 314 
Rhymes— an aphorism . .94 

Richelieu, Cardinal, To . . 338 
Rimol, Thora of . , .248 

River of Yesterday— a sonnet . 383 

— Yvette, To the . . . . 376 
Robert of Sicily, King . . . 243 
Ropewalk, The . . . .220 
Roushan Beg, Leap of . • . 377 
Saga of King Olaf , The . . .247 
Sailing of the Mayflower . . 200 
Saint Augustine, Ladder of . . 212 

— Castine, Baron of . 288 

— John's, Cambridge — a sonnet . 384 
San Bias, Bells of . . .411 
Sand of Desert in Hour-glass . 130 

Sandalphon 225 

Santa Filomena . . . .222 

— Teresa's Book-mark . . 340 

Scanderbeg 309 

Sea hath its Pearls, The . . 93 

— weed 86 

Seaside and the Fireside, The . 121 
Secret of the Sea, The . . .126 
Serenade in the Spanish Student 47 
Sermon of St. Francis, The . 362 
Seven sonnets from Michelangelo 392 
Shadow, A— a sonnet . . . 367 
Shakespeare— a sonnet . . 365 
Sicilian's Tale, The . 243, 273, 304 
Siege of Kazan, The . . . 33? 
Sifting of Peter, The . . . 399 
Sigrid, Queen, the Haughty . 248 
Sin— an aphorism . . . .93 

Singers, The 131 

Skeleton in Armor, The . . .25 
Skerry of Shrieks, The . . 249 
Slave in the Dismal Swamp, The . 42 

— Singing at Midnight, The . 42 
Slave's Dream, The . . .41 
Slavery, Poems on . . . 41 
Sleep— a sonnet . . . .36? 
Snow-flakes ..... 22? 
Something left Undone . . .22? 
Son of the Evening-star, The . 16: 
Song of Hiawatha, The . . .141 

— of the Bell .... 23 

— of the Silent Land ... 24 

Songo Fiver 363 

Sonnets: And thou, O River of 

To-morrow .... 383 

— Artist, The 392 

— Autumn 91 

— Broken Oar, The . . . 385 

— Burial of the Poet, The . . 401 

— Chaucer 365 

— Dana, Richard H., To . . 401 

— Dante 91,393 



Sonnets : Descent of the Muses,The 381 

— Eliot's Oak 381 

— Evening Star, The ... 91 

— Fire 392 

— Four Princesses at Wilna . 384 

— Galaxy, The . . . .366 

— Harvest Moon, The . . 382 

— Holidays 384 

— I stand again on the familiar 

shore 364 

— 11 Ponte Vecchio di Firenze . 368 

— In Attica thy birthplace . . 364 

— Keats, John .... 366 

— Milton, John , . . .365 

— Moods 384 

— My cathedral . . . .400 

— Nameless Grave, A . . 367 

— Nature 380 

— Night 401 

— O River of Yesterday . . 383 
-Old Age ..... 393 

— Old Bridge at Florence, The . 368 

— Parker Cleaveland . . .381 

— Poets, The 381 

— Rhone, To the River . . 382 

— River that stealest with such 

silent pace .... 364 

— Saint Botolph's Town ! . . 383 

— Saint John's, Cambridge . 384 

— Shadow, A 367 

— Shakespeare, William . . 365 

— Shakespearean readings of Mrs. 

Kemble .... 134 

— Sleep 367 

— Sound of the Sea . . .366 

— Summer Day by the Sea . . 3(6 

— Tarry town, In Churchyard at 3f 

— Tennyson, To (Wapentake) . 385 

— The doors are all wide open . 365 

— Three friends of mine . . 364 

— Three Silences of Molinos . 382 

— Tides, The 367 

— Two Rivers, The . . . 383 

— Venice 381 

— Vittoria Colonna, To . . 393 

— Wapentake (To Tennyson) . 385 

— Whittier, John G., To . . 382 

— Woodstock Park . . . 384 

— Yet not in vain . . . 383 

— Youth and Age . . . .392 
Sound of the Sea, The— a sonnet 366 
Spanish Cancioneros, From the . 230 

— Jew's Tale, The . 242, 275, 293 

— Jew's Second Tale, The . . 309 

— Student, The— a play . . 44 
Spinning-wheel, The . . .207 
Spirit of Poetry, The ... 9 

Spring 19 

Springfield. Arsenal at . . 78 
Statue over the Cathedral door . 93 
Stay, stay at home— a song . . 379 
Stork, To the . . . . 338 
Student's Tale, The . 237,277,295 

— Second Tale, The . . .288 
Summer day by the Sea, A . . 366 
Sumner, Charles ... 358 

Sundown 407 

Sunrise on the Hills ... 8 

Sunshine, A Day of 227 

Suspiria 135 

Svend, King, of the Forked Beard 259 



Longfellow 
Lord 



304 



Tales of a Wayside Inn . . 232 
Tarrytown, In the Churchyard at 

—a sonnet .... 3S0 
Tartar Song— The Fugitive . . 333 
Taylor, Bayard . . . .394 
Tegner's Drapa .... 133 
Tennyson, Sonnet to (Wapentake) 385 
Terra di Lavoro .... 360 
Terrace of the Aigalades, On the 390 
Terrestrial Paradise, The . .18 
Thangbrand the Priest . . 253 
Theologian's Tale, The 264, 286, 299 
Thora of Rimol . . . .243 
Three Friends of Mine— a sonnet 3 54 

— Kings, The . . .378 

— Silences of Molinos, The— a 

sonnet 332 

Tide Rises, The, the Tide Falls . 4*3 
Tides, The— a sonnet . . .367 
To-morrow — from the Spanish . 16 

" 'Tis late at night " . . 321 

Torquemada 264 

Tower of Prometheus . . 342 
Translations . 11, 92, 333, 333, 412 
Travels by the Fireside . . 359 
Trisanku, King . . . .378 
Truth— an aphorism ... 94 

Twilight 127 

Two Angels, The .... 215 

— Locks of Hair, The ... 37 

— Rivers, The— a sonnet . . 333 
Ultima Thule, in two parts 394, 402 
Venice — a sonnet . . . .381 
Victor Galbraith . . - .218 
Village Blacksmith, The . . 33 
Virgil's First Epilogue . . .386 

Longfellow, Henry W. April - 

Children's hour - 

Day is done, The ... 

Disasters 

Famine, The - 

Flowers - 

— - — Hiawatha's wooing - 

Old clock on the stairs - 

Rain in summer - 

Reaper and the flowers - 

Skeleton in armor 

Wreck of the Hesperus - 

Farewell to, 1868 

To - 

Longing already to search in and round 

— to be with Christ - 
Longings of Krishna - - - - 
Longwood, Golden Avedding of 
Lonsdale, To countess of - 

— To earl of — a sonnet - 

Look at the fate of summer flowers - 

— here, upon this picture 

— how the feeling-plant, which learned 

— how the golden ocean shines above - 



Viterbo. (Michelangelo.) . 
Vittoria Colonna 

Sonnets to . . 

Vocabulary to Hiawatha 
Vogelweid, Walter von der 
Voices of the !Night 

— of the Waters . 
Vox Populi 

Walter von der Vogelweid 
Wanderer's Night-songs 
Wapentake— a sonnet to Tenny- 
son 

Warden of the Cinque Ports, The 

Warning, The 

Wave. The .... 
Wayside Inn, Tales of a 
Weariness .... 
Wedding-day, The . 
Wentworth, Lady 
White Czar, The . 
Whither? .... 
Whittier, John C, Sonnet to 
Wilna, Four Princesses at . 
Wind over the Chimney, The 
Windmill, The 
Wine of Jurancon . 
Witnesses, The . 
Woods in Winter . 
Woodstock Park — a sonnet 
Workshop of Hephaestus, The 
Wraith in the Mist. The . 

— of Odin, Tbe 
Wreck of the Hesperus, The 
Youth and Age— a sonnet 
Yvette, River, To the . 
Zephyrus 



435 
374 



416 

88 

1 



385 
213 

44 

22 
232 
228 
209 
283 
379 

22 
382 
384 
320 
400 
412 

43 
7 
384 
341 
378 
250 

27 
392 
376 
349 

- Flo. 533 
Fav. 380 

- Fav. 223 

- Fav. 261 

- Fav. 196 

Flo. 404 

- Fav. 45 

- Fav. Ill 

- Fav. 392 

Flo. 484 

- Fav. 357 

- Fav. 412 

- Hoi. 263 

- Low. 374 

- Lon. 
Cow. 

I. S. of S. 

- Whi. 391 

- Wor. 459 

- Wor. 409 

- Wor. 105 

Sha. 832 

- Flo. 108 

- Hood 166 



18 
95 
38 



305 ££f feUow 

Look how the lark soars upward - - - Hood 182 

— in my face : my name - Ros. 274 

— in thy glass, and tell— a sonnet - - - Sha. 1028 

— into happiness through - - - - Sha. 225 

— like the innocent flower - Sha, 791 

— look! I see — I see my love - Dry. 548 

— Meaning of the — a sonnet --'--.- Bro. 85 

— nature through, 'tis revolution all - - Fav. 64 

— not thou on beauty's charming - - - Scott 418 

— now on that adventurer — a sonnet - - Wor. 280 

— nymphs, and shepherds look - - - Mil. 429 

— on him ! — through his dungeon grate Whi. 99 

— on the white Alps round - Hem. 132 

— on who will in apathy - Low. 82 

— out, look out, there are shadows - - - Flo. 509 

— outside, good friend, I pray - Sch. 326 

— The— a sonnet - - Bro. 85 

— the sun sets. Now's the rarest - - Mer. 443 

— then, into thy heart and write ! - Lon. 2 

— up to Pentland's towering top - - - Burns 298 

— upon this flower - - - -' - - Flo. 148 

Looked on better days Sha. 214 

Looker-on here in Vienna Sha. 90 

Looking down - Ing. 438 

— glass, The ------- Pope 374 

— glass, The — a fable Moore 570 

— into his first-born with the love - - Dante 275 

— to the cross ------- Wes. 326 

— upward in a storm - " - - - - - Cow. 76 
Looks handsome in three hundred pounds - Sha. 56 

— through nature up to nature's God - - Pope 219 
Looms there the new land - Low. 357 

Lopez. (Spanish Gypsy.) Eliot 160 

Lora, Battle of ------ Oss. 391 

Lord chamberlain, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha, 592 

— chancellor, c. in Henry viii. - - - Sha. 592 

— chancellor, To the She. 407 

— chief -justice of queen's bench, c. in 

Henry iv., pt. 2 Sha. 409 

— Fanny spins a thousand such a day - - Pope 278 

— God that dost me save and keep - - - Mil. 503 

— Gregory — a song Burns 250 

— how can man preach thy eternal word ? - Her. 151 

— how couldst thou so much appease - - Her. 132 

— how I am all ague, when I seek - - - Her. 119 

— how many are my foes ! Mil. 484 

— I adore thy righteous will ... - Wes. 272 

— I believe a rest remains - Wes. 369 

— I confess my sin is great .... Her. 131 

— I revoke my hasty prayer - - - Wes. 290 

20 



SS 306 

Lord, I will mean and speak thy praise - Her. 257 

— if thou the grace impart - Wes. 222 

— in my silence how do I despise - - - Her. 156 

— in thine anger do not reprehend me - - Mil. 487 

— let the angels praise thy name - - - Her. 189 

— make me coy and tender to offend - - Her. 182 

— marshal ------- Sha. 356 

— may I not thy promise claim - - . - Wes. 236 

— my banner. The - Cow. 54 

— my God, to thee I fly - - - - - Mil. 488 

— my soul with pleasure springs - - - Cow. 84 

— of all being ! throned afar - Hoi. 178 

— of Burleigh, The ------ Ten. 113 

— of my love, to whom — a sonnet - - - Sha. 1031 

— of splendid power - - - - - P. of F. 163 

— of the isles, The ------ Scott 256 

— of the winds ! I feel thee nigh - - - Bry. 116 

— of thy presence and no - - - - - Sha. 333 

— Eonald, my son, " Remarks on - - - Burns 337 

— Ronald's coronach ------ Scott 342 

— send peace, The - - - - - - Cow. 55 

— that I may learn of thee __-*•- Wes. 287 

— thou art mine and I am thine - - - Her. 256 

— Ullin's daughter - - - - - - Cam. 154 

— Walter's wife ------ Bro. 591 

— we thank thee and adore - - - Burns 188 

— what am I, that, with unceasing - - Lon. 16 

— who created man in wealth - Her. 125 

— who hast formed me out of nfud - - Her. 152 

— who hast suffered all for me - - - Cow. 80 

— who ordained for mankind - - - Bry. 267 

— who shall bear that day ? Moore 347 

— will provide, The _-_"._ Cow. 52 

— William was born in a gilded bower - - Scott 317 

— with what bounty and rare clemency - Her. 168 

— with what care hast thou begirt - - - Her. 128 

— with what glory wast thou served - - Her. 197 
Lords. See surnames. 

Lord's supper, For the ----- Wes. 69 

Lordyngs, ther is in Engelond, I gesse - - Cha. 218 

Lorenzo, c. in Spanish Gypsy - - - Eliot 160 

— in love with Jessica, c. in Mer. of Venice - Sha. 181 
Loss and gain Lon. 413 

— of his friends, On the ----- Wes. 41 
Lost (anon.) Fav. 228 

— bird, The Bry. 236 

— bower, The Bro. 223 

— chord, A Pro. 223 

— days — a sonnet Ros. 269 

— heir, The Hood 475 



307 



Lord 
Love 



Lost hope - - Ten. 470 

— lost! lost! Fav. 245 

— Mexican city. (McLellan.) - - - Fav. 109 

— on both sides — a sonnet Eos. 271 

— Pleiad, The ------- Hem. 359 

Loth to disturb what heaven hath hushed - Wor. 668 

Lotus-eaters, The ------ Ten. 46 

— The. (Tennyson.) ------ Flo. 176 

Loud blaw the frosty breezes - - - Burns 209 

— he sang the psalm of David ! - Lon. 42 

— is the vale ! the voice is up - - - Wor. 493 

— o'er my head tho 1 awful thunders - - Scott 373 

— rage the winds without - White 371 

— roars the tempest Pro. 227 

— the angry wind was wailing - - - Lon. 254 
Loudly the sailors cheered - - - Lon. 259 
Louis of France, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - Sha. 526 

— the dauphin, c. in King John - - - Sha. 332 

— the dauphin, c. in Henry v. - - - Sha. 439 

— what reck I by thee ---•.- Burns 260 
Louisa, after an excursion - - - Wor. 104 
Louisiana, Stranger in Hem. 134 
Louse, To a - - - - - - - Burns 76 

L'Ouverture, Toussaint ----- Whi. 41 

To — a sonnet ------ Wor. 271 

Love - Col. 147; Her. 136, 293; Hoi. 203; Hood 326 

Low. 7; She. 566; Ten. 472 

— a sonnet Bro. 92 ; Ing. 466 

— (Samuel Butler.) ---.-.-- Fav. 330 

— (Jean Ingelow.) ------ Fav. 375 

— a bright particular star - - - Sha. 255 

— abused Cow. 102 

— among the saints of Grod - . - Mer. 323 

— and death ------- Ten. 19 

— and desire - Sch. 262 

— and duty Ten. 85 

— and folly- Bry. 143 

— and friendship ------ Lon. If 3 

— and friendship — an essay - Gol. 371 

— and hope ----- Moore 525 : Eos. 248 

— and hymen Moore 602 

— and lunacy - Hood 263 

— and madness - - Cam. 211 

— and marriage ------ Moore 76 

— and reason - Fav. 282 ; Moore 145 

— and sorrow - - - - - - Ten. 470 

— and the novice Moore 240 

— and the sun-dial ------ Moore 649 

— and time Moore 649 

— as a landscape painter - Goe. 253 



Love 
Lovell 



308 



Love bade me welcome ; yet my soul - - Her. 293 

— betters what is best ----- Wor. 231 

— built a stately bouse Her. 170 

— Burial of - - Ten. 465 

— by my theme ! Sing her awake - - - Mer. 323 

— came with all his frantic fire - - - Scott 215 

— Canticle of ------ Mer. 265 

— celestial ------- Erne. 101 

— constrained to obedience ... - Cow. 87 

— daemonic - - Erne. 97 

— dearest lady — a sonnet - Hood 168 

— desiring to ------ Wes. 323 

— enthroned — a sonnet ----- Ros. 227 

— Epigram on - - - - - - - Eme. 242 

— faithful in absence. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. 630 

— Farewell to ------- Cam. 233 

— First kiss of Byron 137 

— For Wes. 321 

— free as air, at sight of human tie 3 - - Pope 111 

— Genius of — an essay ----- Gol. 502 

— Give all to - - - - - - Eme. 84 

— had a fever — ne'er could close - - - Moore 602 

— hath twenty pair of eyes - Sha. 27 

— heavenly, Hymn of - Spe. 659 

— hope, desire and fear .... - She. 469 

— Hymn in honor of Spe. 651 

— I speak to your heart Eos. 284 

— if thy destined sacrifice am I - - - Cow. 627 

— in a cottage ------- Wil. 192 

— in man is one deep principle - - - Wil. 15 

— in the age of chivalry ----- Bry. 148 

— increased by suffering. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 644 

— Initial - - Eme. 92 

— is a hunter-boy ------ Moore 528 

— is blind and lovers cannot see - - - Sha. 189 

— is come with a song and a smile - - Ten. 621 

— is indeed a glorious prize ! - - - - Goe. 366 

— is like a rose - Flo. 96 

— is loveliest when embalmed in tears - Scott 134 

— is my sin — a sonnet ----- Sha. 1045 

— is the cause of my mourning " - Burns 317 

— is the lord whom I obey - Cow. 626 

— is too great a happiness. (Samuel Butler.) Fav. 330 

— is too young to know — a sonnet - - Sha. 1046 

— joy - Her. 208 

— knowest every form of air - Wil. 281 

— knows the secret of grief - Fav. 399 

— lane Hood 391 

— letter, A Mer. 197 

— letter, The — a sonnet Ros. 232 



oaq Love 

3U y Lovell 

Love lies bleeding Wor. 155 

— lift me up upon thy golden wings - - Spe. 659 

— lily r os> 145 

— looks not with the eyes - Sha. 163 

— love who once didst pass the Dardan - - Bro. 176 

— me sweet with all thou art - - - Bro. 114 

— me with thine azure eyes - - - Bro. 114 

— moon, The — a sonnet Eos. 245 

— my Mary, dwells with thee - - - Moore 650 

— never more shall give me pain - - - Burns 312 

— of God, The - Bry. 149 

— of God, the end of life. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 631 

— of the world reproved Cow. 389 

— on his errand bound to go - - - - Erne. 242 

— on through all ills and love on - - Moore 477 

— poems -------- Col. 147 

— pride and forgetfulness ----- Ten. 469 

— pure, Acquiescence of. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 627 

— Pure and fervent. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. 631 

— Eecollections of Col. 166 

— seldom haunts the breast - Pope 493 

— should I fear death most for you - - Eos. 248 

— sought is good, but given unsought - - Sha. 293 

— sweetness — a sonnet - - - - Eos. 237 

— Symptoms of - - - - - - - Cow. 28 

— that long since hast to thy mighty - - Spe. 651 

— the offender, yet detest ----- Pope 113 

— thou thy land, with love far-brought - Ten. 57 

— though breathed but on a word - - - Wil. 275 

— through your spirit and mine - - - Eos. 241 

— thy mother, little one ! - - - - - Hood 171 

— thyself last ; cherish those hearts - - Sha. 612 

— To -------- Tho. 465 

— to his singer held a glistening leaf - - Eos. 255 

— token, A Pro. 126 

— took up the glass of time - Ten. 89 

— Triumph of Sch. 48 

— triumphant 1 ' — a song Dry. 559 

— under friendship's vesture white - - - Eog. 339 

— unknown ------- Her. 218 

— wakes and weeps while beauty - - - Scott 436 

— wandering through the golden maze - Moore 650 

— will expire — the gay ----- Cra. 35 

— without loss, and wealth - - - P. of F. 103 
Loved once Bro. 95 

— voyager ! his pages had a zest - - - Cam. 277 

— you better than you knew - Fav. 306 
Lovel, Lord, c. in Eichard iii. - - - Sha. 556 
Loveliest of lovely things are they - - - Bry. 116 
Lovell, Sir Thomas, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 



Lovely oin 

Lowell oIU 

Lovely daries — a song ----- Burns 230 

— he looks, 'tis true, with the light - - - Sen. 260 

— lass of Inverness— a song - Burns 259 

— Polly Stewart — a song - Burns 260 
Lover, Samuel. Child and autumn leaf - Flo. 507 

— in all shapes — a song Goe. 30 

— to his mistress, The Cam. 193 

Lovers Ing. 519 

— complaint, A ----- - Sha. 1047 

— fate, The Tho. 461 

— journey, The Cra. 96 

— morning salute — a song - Burns 264 

— tale, The Ten. 664 

— walk, The — a sonnet Eos. 232 

Love's p, mighty lord ----- Sha. 28 

— baubles — a sonnet - Eos. 238 

— distresses Goe. 193 

— fatality— a sonnet ------ Eos. 253 

— fountain-marge is fairly spread - - Mer. 324 

— language may be talked with these - - Flo. 8 
Love's Labor's Lost — a comedy - - - Sha. 135 

— last adieu - - - - - - Byron 143 

— last gift — a sonnet ----- Ros. 255 

— light summer cloud - Moore 650 

— lovers — a sonnet Eos. 230 

— nocturn -------- Eos. 15 

— of the angels ------ Moore 540 

— patience glimmered out through - - - Low. 35 

— philosophy Fkv. 256 ; She. 419 

— rose --------- She. 567 

— testament — a sonnet ----- Eos. 228 

— thread of gold ------ i n g. 508 

— to hear himself talk Sha. 723 

— worshipers alone can know - - - - Bry. 143 

— young dream ------ Moore 233 

Lovesight — a sonnet ------ Eos. 228 

Lovest thou me? Cow. 63 

Loving all things which live - - - L. of A. 161 

— and liking Wor. 132 

— friend, the gift of one - Bro. 79 

— one once more— a sonnet - Goe. 217 

— one speaks - - Goe. 374 

— one writes — a sonnet ----- Goe. 217 

— she is and tractable ----- Wor. 80 

— The - - P. of F. 103 

Low ambition and the thirst of praise - - Cow. 144 

— and mournful be the strain - Erne. 178 

— flowing breezes are roaming - - - Ten. 461 

— was our pretty cot Col. 16, 58 

Lowe, Sir Hudson Moore 608 



311 



Lovely 
Lowell 



LOWELL, JAMES RUSSELL, Poems of: 






Above and Below . . . .79 
After the Burial .... 353 

Al Fresco 339 

Aladdin 344 

All-Saints 363 

Allegra 10 

Ambrose .... .78 

Anti-Apis 94 

Appledore, Pictures from . . 347 
Auf Wiedersehen ! 352 

Autograph, For an ... 339 
Bartlett, John, To 366 

Beaver Brook 100 

Beggar, The .... 5 
Beloved, in the noisy city— a sonnet 22 

Bibliolatres 99 

Biglow Papers .... 159 
Biorn's Beckoners . . . 354 
Birch-tree, The .... 80 
Birdofredum Sawin. See Big- 
low Papers. 
Blondel, Scenes from Life of . 380 
Captive, The .... 79 
Capture of Fugitive Slaves . . 82 
Cathedral, The . . . .393 
Centennial ode, 1876 . . . 416 
Changeling, The .... 90 
Channing, William Ellery, Elegy 

on death of . . . . 104 
Chippewa Legend, A . . .54 
Cochituate Celebration, For the 96 

Columbus 56 

Concord Battle-ground, Graves on 97 

— Centenary Ode, 1875 . . .407 

Contrast, A 76 

Courtin, The. (Biglow Papers.) . 229 
Dandelion, To the 83 

Dante, On a Portrait of, by Giotto 87 
Dara ...... 335 

Darkened Mind, The . . .362 
Dead House, The . . .353 
Death of a Friend's Child . . 87 

— of C. T. Torrey, On the . . 104 
Debate in the Sennit. (Biglow 

Papers.) . . .184 

Dialect, Yankee, Notes on . . 209 
Elegy on Death of Wm, Ellery 

Channing . . . .104 
Ember Picture, An . . .373 

Eurydice 89 

Extreme Unction ... 76 
Fable for Critics, A ... 113 

Falcon, The 48 

Familiar Epistle to a Friend . 371 
Fancy's Casuistry . . . 365 
Far 'yond this narrow parapet of 

time 23 

Fatherland, The . . . .13 
Festina Lente. (Biglow Papers.) 258 
Finding of the Lyre, The . . 338 
First Snow-fall, The . . .336 
Foot-path, The . . . .376 
For this true nobleness— a sonnet 20 

Forlorn, The 14 

Fountain, The .... 10 

— of Youth, The . . . . 359 
Fourth of July Ode. 1876 . . 416 
France, Ode to, 1848 . . .92 



Freedom, Poems on . . . 56, 98 
Fugitive Slaves, Capture of . .82 
Future, To the . . . . 65 
Garrison, William Lloyd . . 103 
Ghost-seer, The . . . . . 84 
Giddings, Joshua R., Sonnet to . 25 
Glance behind the Curtain . 49 
Glossary to Biglow Papers . . 296 
Godminster Chimes . . . 341 
Gold Egg— a dream fantasy . . 369 
Graves of Two English Soldiers, 

Suggested by ... 97 
Great Truths are Portions — a 

sonnet 20 

Growth of the Legend, The . 74 
Gudrida's Prophecy . . . 356 
Hamburg, Fire at ... 60 
Happiness, Ode to . . . . 367 
Harvard Commemorative Ode, 

1865 384 

Hebe 66 

Heritage, The 15 

Hood, Thomas, To memory of . 106 
Hunger and Cold . . . .61 
I ask not for those thoughts . 20 

— cannot think that thou shouldst 21 

— grieve not that ripe knowledge 25 

— thought our love at full— a son- 

net 25 

— would not have this perfect love 

—a sonnet .... 20 
In absence— a sonnet . . .24 

— the Twilight . . . .375 

Incident in a Railroad Car . . 44 
Index to Biglow Papers . . 299 
Indian Summer Reverie ! . 69 
Invita Minerva .... 359 

Invitation, An . . . . • . 344 

Irene ...... 3 

Jonathan to John .... 248 

Keats, John, Sonnet to the 

Spirit of 20 

Kettelopotomachia. (Biglow 

Papers.) 279 

Kossuth, Louis .... 101 
L.; A. C, Sonnet to .• .19 

Lamartine, Alphonse de . . 101 
Landlord, The .... 62 
Leaving the matter open— a tale 164 
Legend of Brittany . . .27 
L'Envoi— " Whither? Albeit I 

follow 390 

— " Whither my heart hath wiser 25 
Longfellow, Henry W , To . . 374 

Longing 92 

Love 7 

M. L., To— a song ... 9 

M. O. S., Sonnet to . . . .23 
M. W., Sonnet to . . . . 20 
Mahmood the Image-breaker . 358 

Masaccio 340 

Mason and Slidell. (Biglow 

Papers.) .... 238 
Memoriee Positum . . .381 

Memorial Verses .... 101 

Midnight 15 

Miles Standish, Interview with 81 
Mood, A 354 



X,o well 

IiUSUS 



312 



Moon, The 9 

Music, Remembering ... 9 
My love 5 

— Love, I have no fear . . .21 
New England dialect, Notes on 209 

— Year's Eve, 1850 . . . . 339 
Nomades, The . . . .345 
Norton, Charles Eliot, To . .329 
Note to Title-page of Biglow 

Papers 160 

O moonlight deep and tender . 19 

Oak. The 77 

Ode, Centennial, 1876 . . . 413 

— " In the old days of awe " . 11 
On Board the '76 . . . . 383 
Oriental Apologue, An . . . 322 
Our love is not a fading earthly 

flower— a sonnet . . .24 
Palfrey. John G .... 102 
Palinode— Autumn . . . . 352 

Parables 19, 96 

Parting of the Ways, The . . 342 
Past, To the .... 64 

Perdita, To, singing ... 8 
Phillips, AVendell— a sonnet . 24 
Pictures from Appledore . .347 
Pine-tree. To a . . . . 63 

Pioneer, The 91 

Pious Editor's Creed. (Biglow 

Papers.) 187 

Prayer, A 15 

Present Crisis, The . . .67 
Pressed Flower, With a 5 

Prometheus 33 

Remembering Music ... 9 

Requiem, A 18 

Rhoecus 46 

Rosaline 17 

Rose, The— a ballad . . . 16 

Sea-weed 338 

Search, The 66 

Self -study 316 

Serenade 4 

She came and went . . .90 
Shepherd of King Admetus . 44 
Si Descendero in Inf ernum . . 63 
Singing Leaves, The . . , . 337 
Sir Launfal, Vision of . . . 107 

Sirens, The 2 

Skim-milk has its own opinions . 273 
Sonnets: A. C. L., To . . 19 

— A poet cannot strive for despot- 

ism 23 

— Beloved in the noisy city . . 22 

— Far yond this narrow parapet 23 

— For this true nobleness . . 20 

— Giddings. Joshua R., To . 25 

— Great truths are portions . 20 

— I ask not for those thoughts 20 

— I cannot think that thou shouldst 21 

Lowell, James Eussell. Dandelion 

Day in June - 

Fountain, The 

Present crisis, The - 

Winter-piece - 

Birthday festival to - 

Farewell to 



Sonnets: I grieve not that ripe 

knowledge ... 25 

— I thought our love at full . . 25 

— I would not have this perfect 
love 20 

— In Absence 24 

— Keats, John, To the Spirit of 20 

— M. O. S„ To . . . .23 

— M. W„ To, on her birthday . 21 

— My Love, I have no fear . . 21 

— On reading Wordsworth's 
Sonnets 22 

— Once hardly in a cycle . . 22 

— Our love is not a fading earthly 
flower 24 

— Phillips, Wendell ... 24 

— Street, The .... 24 

— Sub Pondere Crescit . . . 22 

— The love of all things springs 22 

— There never yet was flower fair 
in vain .... 21 

— Therefore think not the Past is 
wise alone .... 23 

— What were I love . . .19 

Sower, The 61 

Speech of Preserved Doe. (Biglow 

Papers.) .... 263 
Street, The— a sonnet ... 24 
Studies for Two Heads . . 86 
Sub Pondere Crescit— a sonnet . 22 
Summer Storm .... 6 

There never yet was flower fair 21 
Thorwald's Lay . . . .355 

Threnodia 1 

Token, The 44 

Torrey, C. T.. Death of . .104 

Trial 48 

Tweedlede?. Gospel according to 188 
Two Gunners. The— a fable . . 164 
Under the Old Elm . . .410 

— the Willows . . . .329 
Unhappv Lot of Mr. Knott . 313 

Villa Franca 368 

Violet ! sweet violet ! . . . 17 
Vision of Sir Launfal, The . . 107 
Voyage to Vinland, The . . 354 
War Poems, 1861-65 . . .378 
Washers of the Shroud, The . 378 
We too have autumns . . .98 
What Rabbi Jehosha said . . 363 

— Avere I. Love— a sonnet . . 19 
Wilbur, Homer, pseud, of J. R. 

Lowell. 
Wind-harp, The .... 351 
Winter-evening hvmn to my fire 363 
Without and Within ... 340 
Wordsworth's Sonnets, On reading 22 
Yankee Dialect, Notes on . . 209 

Yussouf 362 

Zack, Old. (Biglow Papers.) . 200 

Flo. 525 

- Flo. 334 

- Fav. 420 

- Fav. 363 
Flo. 291 

- Hoi. 144 

- Hoi. 137 



o-i q Lowell 

Lowell, Maria. Morning-glory - - - - Flo. 359 

Lowliness in young ambition's ladder - - Sha. 769 

Lowly, sprightly little flower ! - - - Flo. 32 

Lowther ! in thy majestic pile — a sonnet - Wor. 409 

— Lady Mary, To— a sonnet - Wor. 236 
Loyal brother, " The, Prologue to - - - Dry. 496 
Luce, c. in Comedy of Errors - Sha. 93 
Lucentio, c. in Taming of the Shrew - - Sha. 229 
Lucetta, c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - Sha. 21 
Luciana, c. in Comedy of Errors - - - Sha. 93 

Lucifer, c. in Cain Byron 105 

Lucile -------- Mer. 7 

Lucile de Nevers ------- Mer. 31 

Lucilia, wedded to Lucretius - - - - Ten. 444 

Lucilius, c. in Julius Caesar - - - Sha. 764 

— c. in Timon of Athens - - - - Sha. 741 
Lucio, c. in Measure for Measure - - - Sha. 67 
Lucius, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

— Young, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

— a lord, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 

— a servant, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 

— c. in Julius Caesar Sha. 764 

Luck of Edenhall, The Lon. 28 

Luckless fortune — a song - Burns 196 

Lucknow, Defense of Ten. 661 

— Popes at Whi. 241 

Lucifer. (Monkes Tale.) Cha. 456 

Lucrative offices are seldom lost - - - Cow. 234 

Lucretia, c. in The Cenci - - - - - She. 268 

Lucretius - - Ten. 444 

Lucullus, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 

Lucy Ashton's song ----- Scott 418 

— Sir William, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - - Sha. 469 

— Gray, or Solitude Wor. 82 

— for her golden wedding Hoi. 298 

Ludolph, son of Otho, c. in Otho the Great - Keats 333 

Ludovic, Father, c. in House of Aspen - - Scott 562 

Luigi, Andrea di ----- - Eog. 43 

Luke, St. , the painter — a sonnet - - Ros. 157, 263 

— On passage in gospel of Wes. 299 
Lull me to sleep, ye winds - Lon. 367 
Lullaby, O lullaby! Hood 397 

— of an infant chief Scott 399 

— of a female convict ----- White 317 
Lulled by the sound of pastoral bells - - Wor. 304 

— into pleasant dreams by happy toils L. of A. 62 

Luna To— a song Goe. 41 

Lungi & ]a luce che in su queste muro - - Ros. 304 

Lstjjpa lus&ri vaticani, De - Her. 573 

IiHisus amjeitia est, uni nisi dedita ceu fit - Cow. 647 



Lutheran 
Maddock 



314 



Lutheran, Popish, Calvinistic -■--..- Lon. 
Luther's hynin - - - Whi. 

Luve nevermore shall give me pain - Burns 
Lychorida, nurse, c. in Pericles - - - Sha. 
Lycidas -"'-•_ - - - - - Mil. 

— (T. B. Aldrich.) Fav. 

— and Moeris — a pastoral ----- Vir. 

Lycoris, Ode to Wor. 

Lying -------- Moore 

— imbedded in the green champaign - - Ing. 
Lymoges, duke of Austria, c. in King John - Sha. 
Lynceus, c. in Faust ----- Faust 

Lynette, G-areth and ------ Ten. 

Lynn, Bells of ------ Lon. 

Lynx amid moles ! had I stood - - - Col. 

Lyre, though such power --.-■- Wor. 

— To my — an ode -. White 
Lyrics - Eos. 145, 279 ; Whi. 234, 
Lysander, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 
Lysimachus, c. in Pericles - Sha. 
Lyttleton, Secretary, c. in Charles the First She. 
Lyulph's tale ------- Scott 

M , To ------- Byron 

— To, from abroad ------ Wil. 

M n, Miss, Letter to Burns 

M. H.,To - - - - - - - -Wor. 

M. ; H. C, In memory of - - Hoi. 

M. L., To— a song ----- -Low. 

M. O. S., Sonnet to - - - - - - Low. 

M. P. ; or the Blue-stocking — selections - Moore 
M. S. G., To - - - - - - Byron 135, 



M. W., Sonnet to 

Ma douce Jouvence " 

M : Adam, Mr., of Craigengillan, Epistle to 

Macartney, Miss, To 

Macaulay, Mr. , Letter to - 



Low. 

Mer. 
Burns 

Cow. 
Burns 



94 

262 
312 
977 
464 

40 

46 
425 
160 
477 
332 
170 
492 
320 
216 
174 
279 
314 
161 
977 
485 
235 
141 
274 
388 
138 
232 
9 

23 
298 
141 

20 
238 
165 

46 
435 



MACAULAY, THOMAS BABINGTON, Poems of: 



Armada, The . . . . 1 11 
Arnault, A. V., Translation from 162 
August, Lines written in . .199 
Battle of Moncontour . . . 153 

— of Naseby .... 155 

— of the Lake Regillus ... 56 
Bentinck, Lord Wm,, Inscription 

to 209 

Capys, Prophecy of . . . 119 
Cavalier's March to London . 205 
Churchyard, Sermon in a . . 159 
Country Clergyman's Trip to 

Cambridge . . . .184 
Deliverance of Vienna . . .191 

Dieslrae 163 

Epitaphs: Jacobite, On a . . 198 

— Malkin, B. H., On . . . 210 



Epitaphs: Martin, Henry, On . 149 
— Metcalfe, Lord, On . . . 211 
Heath, Benjamin H. 210 

Horatius 31 

Huguenots, Song of the. (Ivry.) . 136 
Jacobite, Epitaph on a . . 198 
Lake Regillus, Battle of the . . 56 
Last Buccaneer, The . . . 197 
Lays of Ancient Rome . . . 31 
Marriage of Tirzah and Ahirad 166 
Martin, Henry, Epitaph on . . 149 
Metcalfe, Lord, Epitaph on .211 
Moncontour, Battle of . . .153 
Monk of St. Gall, Paraphrase from 203 
Naseby, Battle of . . . .155 
O stay, Madonna! . . .188 
Pitt, To Memory of . ... 149 



315 



Lutheran 
Maddock 



Plautus, Translation from . .212 

Political Georgics . . . . 189 

Prophecy of Capys . . . 119 

Radical War Song . . . .150 

Regillus, Lake, Battle of . . 56 

Rome, Ancient, Lays of . 31 



Sermon in a churchyard . . 159 
Stanhope. Mary C, Valentine to . 214 
Translation from Plautus . , 212 
Vienna, Deliverance of . . .191 

Virginia 92 

War Song r Radical . . . .150 



Macaulay, Thos. B. Lays of Ancient Rome— 

an extract - - * - - - - Fav. 
Macbeth — a tragedy - Sha. 

— Lady, c. in Macbeth ----- Sha. 

— king, Castle of - Mer. 

Macculloch, David, Letter to - - - - Burns 
Macdonald, To Eonald ----- Scott 
MacDuff 's cross — scenes of a play - - - Scott 
Macduff, a nobleman, c. in Macbeth - - Sha. 

— Lady, c. in Macbeth Sha. 

Macer — a character Pope 

MacFlecknoe - - - - - - - Dry. 

Macgregor's gathering - - - - Scott 

Mackay, Charles. Clear the way - 

Life - 

Mackenzie, Dr. , Letter to - 

— Farewell to - 

M'Lehose, Mrs. See Clarinda, Letters to 
MacLellan,Neil, c. in Auchindrane 
McLellan. Fall of the Indian — an extract 



Fav. 

Flo. 

Burns 

Scott 

Burns 

Scott 

Fav. 



345 

788 
788 
269 
499 
387 
483 
788 
788 
371 
175 
401 
350 
469 
362 
394 
562 
494 
130 
109 
106 
416 
159 
439 
180 



— Lost Mexican city ------ Fav. 

M'Leod, John, On death of - Burns 
Macleod's wizard flag from the gray castle - Scott 
M'Math, John, Epistle to - Burns 
Macmorris, an officer, c. in Henry v. - - Sha. 
M'Murdo, John, Epigrams to - - Burns 
Letters to - Burns 437, 458, 492, 493 

— Mrs., Letter to ----- - Burns 433 

McPherson's farewell — a song - - - Burns 208 

— Ossian, Imitation of - - - - - Byron 167 

— Ossian, On blank leaf of - Wor. 405 
Macready, William Charles, Sonnet to - Ten. 485 

Macrimmon's lament Scott 416 

Macromicros ------- Mer. 259 

M'Whinnie, Mr., Letter to - - - Burns 351 

Mad dog, Elegy on death of - - - - Gol. 128 

— dogs, On— an essay ----- Gol. 435 

— river - Lon. 405 

Madam, the flower that I received from you - Tho. 392 

Madame la Marquise Mer. 216 

Maddalo, a courtier, c. in Tasso - - - She. 457 

— Julian and She. 207 

Maddened by earth's wrong and evil - - Whi. 122 
Maddock, B., Letters to, from H. K. White. 

See Letters. 



Made oifi 

Man ^ iD 

Made you no more offense than - - - Sha. 859 

Madeline -•-..; Ten. 10 

— a domestic tale ------ Hem. 195 

Madge Wildfire's songs - - - - - Scott 417 

Madgeburg, Destruction of — a song - - Goe. 77 

Madison, Four lakes of - - . - - - Lon. 409 

Madonna, wherefore hast thou sent to me - She. 437 

Maeldune, Voyage of - - - - - - Ten. 715 

Magazine in miniature, Specimen of —an essay Gol. 418 

Magdalen Dacres, Lady, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

Magic land, The - - - - . - - Mer. 185 

— net, The - - Goe. 197 

Magicis rotatibus, De Her. 567 

Magico prodigioso of Calderon, Scenes from - She. 537 

Magic, Pupil in— a ballad ... - Goe. 132 

Magnetic lady to her patient - She. 443 

Magnific lord, whose virtues excellent - Spe. 2Q 

Mahadeva, lord of earth ----- Goe. 140 

Mahmood, the image-breaker - - - Low. 358 

Mahmud, c. in Hellas ------ She. 377 

Mahomet. See also Mohammed. 

Mahomet's song— an ode - Goe. 163 

Maid of Athens, ere we part - - - Byron 243 

— oflsla -------- Scott 440 

— of my love ! sweet Genevieve ! Col. 34 

— of Neidpath, The - Scott 377 

— of Orleans ------- Sch. 231 

— of Orleans, Songs from - Sch. 345 

— of the mill's treachery — a ballad - - - Goe. 121 

— of the mill's repentance— a ballad - - Goe. 123 

— of Toro, The ------ - Scott 376 

— that tends the goats, " Remarks on - - Burns 305 
Maiden and weathercock ----- Lon. 399 

— crowned with glossy blackness. (Spanish 

Gypsy.) - - Eliot 166 

— speaks, The— a sonnet ----- Goe. 215 

— speech of seolian harp - Erne. 220 

— stay ! O whither Sch. 313 

— The. (Agnes.) ------ Hoi. 90 

— that with sullen brow ----- Col. 158 

— when such a soul as thine is born - - Low. 21 

— when thou cam'st to light - - - Faust 187 

— whose sorrows wail the living dead - - Scott 427 

— wishes — a song ------ Goe. 36 

— with the fair brown tresses r Whi. 109 

— with the meek, brown eyes - - - - Lon. 39 

— wrap thy mantle round thee - - - White 2&2 
Maidenhood -------- Lon. 39 

Maidens call it love-in-idleness - - - Sha. 165 

— lament, The Sch. 112 



qi *r Made 

' > L i Man 

Maidens, like moths, are ever caught by glare Byron 279 

— sorrow, The ------- Bry. 200 

Maid's lament. (Walter Savage Landor.) - Fav. 336 

— of Attitash, The ------ Whi. 305 

— remonstrance, The ----- Cam. 228 

Maintainer, The P. of F. 88 

Majestic, The P. of F. 34 

Majesty of the nature of man - - - - Sch. 253 

Major Bellenden's song ----- Scott 405 

Make my seated heart knock at my ribs - Sha. 790 

— the night joint laborer - Sha. 812 

— your mark. (David Barker.) - - - Fav. 259 
Maker of all ye truly call the strong - P. of F. 79 

— of the mouth of man ----- Wes. 242 

Makes a swan-like end Sha. 192 

Maketh the heart cease beating - P. of F. 128 

Making night hideous Sha. 817 

— of man - - P. of F. 38 

— the bold wag by their praises - - - Sha. 152 

— their lives a prayer - - - - - Whi. 152 
Malachi, On a passage in book of - - - Wes. 291 
Malcolm, Capt. Daniel, Epitaph to - - Hoi. 322 

— son of Duncan, c. in Macbeth - - - Sha. 788 
Malesherbes. Sur la mort d'une jeune fille - Flo. 354 
Malham cove — a sonnet ----- Wor. 240 

Mallet's Mustapha, Prologue to Tho. 476 

Malpiglio, a poet, c. in Tasso - She. 457 

Malta, Knights of ----- - Sch. 223 

Malvolio, steward, c. in Twefth Night - - Sha. 281 
Mamillus, young prince of Sicilia, c. in Winter's 

Tale - - - Sha. 304 

Mamma, are you — my stepmother - - - Fav. 437 

Mammon, an arch-priest, c. in (Edipus Tyr. Sha. 323 

Man - Her. 179 

— and nature ------- Bro. 70 

— delights not me Sha. 823 

— dwells apart, though not alone - - Ing. 125 

— Essay on - Pope 185 

— frames his judgment on reason - - Sch. 260 

— hath a weary pilgrimage ... - Fav. 23 

— hath his daily work of body or mind - Mil. 99 

— in society is like a flower - Cow. 31 7 

— is in truth a poor creature - • - Sch. 269 

— knows not love — such love - Fav. 138 

— like is it to fall into sin ------ Lon. 93 

— never is but always to be blest - - - Pope 189 

— of lawes tale ------ Cha. 149 

— of mode, The— an epilogue - - - - Dry. 515 

— of virtue has need — into life - - - Sch. 260 

— on the dubious waves of error tossed - - Cow. 117 



Man 01 q 

Mark ** ± « 

Man that hath a tongue ----- Sha. 31 

— to the last is but a froward child - - - Rog. 342 

— was made of social earth - Erne. 97 

— was made to mourn - - Burns 49 ; Fav. 249 
Manfred — a dramatic poem - Byron 87 
Manfred's soliloquy. (Byron.) - Fav. 20 

Manhood Hoi. 196 

Manifest, The - - - - - - P. of F. 142 

Manners Erne. 234 

— with fortune's humors turn - Pope 228 
Manoah, c. in Samson Agonistes - - - Mil. 350 

— Wife of, to her husband - Whi. 85 
Man's dignity Sch. 315 

— inhumanity to man - Burns 50 

— life. (George Crabbe.) - '- Fav. 39 

— life is like a sparrow, mighty king ! - - Wor. 357 

— love is of man's life a thing apart - - Bvron 336 

— medley - Her. 220 

— requirements, A - - - - - - Bro. 114 

Manse in Scotland — a sonnet - Wor. 384 

Mansfield's library, Burning of - Cow. 395 
Manso, Giovanni Battista, To. (Milton.) Cow. 530, 583 

Mantle of St. John de Matha, The - - Whi. 314 

Manual, A - - - Cow. 600 

Manuel, c. in Manfred - Byron 87 

Manus -------- Mil. 550 

Many a day and night my bark stood - - Goe. 175 

— a green isle needs must be - - - - She. 203 

— a guest I'd see to-day ----- Goe. 94 

— a perfume breathed Flo. 121 

— a time and oft in the Rialto - - - - Sha. 184 

— an arduous trial the Grecian youth - - Sch. 280 

— good works I've done and ended - - - Goe. 227 

— headed multitude -'._-- Sha. 666 

— if God should make them kings - - - Pro. 220 

— strokes, though with a little ax - - Sha. 532 

— there be who, through the vale of life - White 339 
Maradas, Don, a general, c. in The Piccolomini Col. 407 
Marais du cygne, Le - - - - - - Whi. 243 

Marathon, Sleeper of Hem. 263 

Marcello, Cardinal, c. in Michelangelo - - Lon. 452 

Marcellus, an officer, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 
March, Earl of (Edmund Mortimer), c. in 

Henry iv., pt. 1 Sha. 382 

(Edmund Mortimer), c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 

(Edward), c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - Sha. 526 

March - - - Bry. 53; Flo. 410; Goe. 68; Spe. 528 

— march, Ettrick and Teviotdale - - - Scott 428 

— of Miles Standish, The - Lon. 205 

— of rebel angels. (Milton.) - Fav. 193 



Q1 Q Man 
01 * Mark 

March the twenty -seventh - - - - Bry. 231 

— Written in ------ Wor. 174 

Marchaundes tale, The Cha. 261 

Marchioness dowager of S 11, To the - Moore 127 

Marcius, c. in Coriolanus Sha. 654 

Marcus Antonius, c. in Julius Caesar - - Sha. 764 

Mardian, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 

Mare rubrum Hoi. 212 

Maremma, The - Hem. 266 

Marenghi She. 458 

Mareschault, Sir Robt. , c. in P. Van Artevelde Tay . 30 

Margarelon, c. in Troilus and Cressida - Sha. 622 

Margaret, c. in Faust Faust 22 

— c. in Much Ado About Nothing - - Sha. Ill 

— c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 

— c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 Sha. 496 

— c. in Richard hi. Sha. 556 

Margaret - - - - - - - - Ten. 53 

— and Dora - Cam. 239 

— at her spinning-wheel. (Faust.) - - Goe. 394 

— in the Xebec - - Ing. 488 

Margaret's beauteous — Grecian arts - - Cam. 239 

Margret, Romaunt of Bro. 33 

Marguerite Whi. 376 

— de Tours - - Rog. 24 

Maria, c. in Love's Labor's Lost - - - Sha. 135 

— c. in Twelfth Night Sha. 281 

— could Horace have guessed - - - Cow. 471 

— I have every good ------ Cow. 446 

Mariamne, Herod's lament for - - - Byron 194 

Mariana, c. in Measure for Measure - - Sha. 67 

— c. in All's Well that Ends WeU - - Sha. 254 
Mariana - Ten. 9 

— in the south - - ----- - Ten. 25 

Marianne's dream She. 403 

Marianus, Dr., c. in Faust - - - Faust 170 

Marigold, Poesy of the Flo. 158 

— The. (G. Withers.) Flo. 159 

Marina, dtr. of Pericles, c. in Pericles - - Sha. 977 

Mariner's Cave, The ----- Ing. 445 

— hymn. (Mrs. Southey.) ... - Fav. 331 
Marion MacLellan, c. in Auchindrane - - Scott 494 

— To Byron 144 

— why that pensive brow - Byron 144 
Marion's men, Song of Bry. 134 
Marius among the ruins of Carthage - - Hem. 259 
Mark Antony, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - Sha. 911 

— how the feathered tenants of the flood - Wor. 198 

— how the lark and linnet sing - - - Dry. 316 

— now how a plain tale ----- Sha. 392 



Mark Q A 

Matron °^V 

Mark, On passages in gospel of Wes. 298 

— the blossoms calmly sprouting - - - Faust 186 

— the concentered hazels — a sonnet - - Wor. 235 

— this holy chapel well ! Col. 200 

— those proud boasters of a splendid line Moore 68 

— when she smiles with amiable cheer - Spe. 694 

— yonder pomp— a song - Burns 284 

— you the floor ? that square and speckled stone Her. 150 
Marlborough's house, On ----- Pope 389 
Marlefield, Lines on - Tho. 397 
Marlow, Sir Charles, c. in She Stoops to Conquer Gol. 270 

— Young, c. in She Stoops to Conquer - - Gol. 270 
Marmaduke, c. in The Borderers - - - Wor. 43 
Marmion : a tale of Flodden Field - - Scott 42 
Marquis. Epitaph on a pseudo - - - Burns 179 
Marriage ceremony, The — a sonnet - - Wor. 377 

— Forbearance in - Cow. 431 

— morning ------- Ten. 492 

— of Tirzah and Ahirad, The - Mac. 166 

— ring, To a - Her. 572 

— song. See Epithalamium. 

Marriages. (The Parish Register.) - - Cra. 279 

Married lovers ------- l n g. 439 

Marshall, Emilie (acrostic), Sonnet on- - Wfl. 291 

Marsus, Domitius, Epitaph of - - - Byron 133 

Martext, Sir Oliver, c. in As You Like It - Sha. 205 

Martha, c. in Faust ------ Faust 22 

— Death of ------- Hoi. 146 

Martial. Epigram of Pope 399 

— On Elphinstone's translation of - - Burns 179 

— elegy -------- Cam. 127 

Martin, c. in House of Aspen - - - Scott 562 

— The Dahlia ------- Flo. 157 

— Henry, Epitaph on - Mac. 149 

— I wonder who makes all the songs " - - lng. 213 

— Marr-all, Prologue ----- Dry. 479 

Martina, niece of the padre, c. in S. Student Lon. 44 

Martineau, Harriet. Song for August - Flo. 472 

Martinique, Slaves of - - - - - - Whi. 77 

Martinus Scriblerus - - - - - Pope 523 

Martins, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

Martyrdom, Joy in. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. .643 

Marullus, c in Julius Csesar - Sha. 764 

Marvell, Andrew. The Garden - - - Flo. 422 

Marvels of sleep grown cold - lng. 457 

Mary ! — a song - Burns 200 

— I believe thee true ----- Moore 98 

— I want a lyre with other strings - - Cow. 495 

— in heaven. To— a song - Burns 219 

— Lazarus and - Wil. 54 



o o 1 Mark 

"A* Matron 

Mary Magdalene - Bry. 139; Her. 275; Ros. 157 

— mine that art Mary's rose - Ros. 166 

— Morison — a song ----- Burns 193 

— queen of Scots— a sonnet - Wor. 399 

— queen of Scots— Captivity — a sonnet - Wor. 239 

— queen of Scots, Lament of - Burns 135 ; Wor. 107 

— Scott, the flower of Yarrow, Remarks on Burns 308 

— Stuart, Song from ------ Sch. 344 

— the moon is sleeping on thy grave - - White 306 
-^ since first I knew thee to this hour - - Low. 23 

— To - - - - - - - Burns 260 ; Cow. 504 

— To, on receipt of picture - - - Byron 141 

— To, who died in this opinion - - - She. 567 
Mary's dream," Remarks on - - - Burns 304 

— ghost - Hood 599 

— girlhood — a sonnet ----- R s. 156 
Marzio, an assassin, c. in The Cenoi - - She. 268 

Masaccio - Low. 340 

Mask, The ------- Bro. 110 

Mason and Slidell. (Biglow Papers.) - - Low. 238 

Masque of Alfred, Songs in the - - - Tho. 470 

— of anarchy She. 317 

— of Pandora Lon. 341 

Massachusetts. (Our State.) - Whi. 150 

— medical society, For the - Hoi. 145 

— medical society, For dinner of, 1870 - - Hoi. 280 

— To . . . whi. 67 

— to Virginia - - - - - - Whi. 62 

Massacre at Scio ------ Bry. 43 

— of Glencoe - - - - - - - Scott 385 

— in Piemont — a sonnet - Mil. 479 
Massey, Gerald. Babe Christabel— an extract Fav. 352 
Master and scholar ------ Hoi. 192 

— behold my sheaves -..-.. Fav. 424 

— I marvel how the fishes live - - - Sha. 982 

— of the murmuring courts - Ros. 15 

— quoth the auld hound - Ing. 514 

— so early of the various lyre - - - White 211 
Masters, it is proved already - - - Sha. 128 

— spread yourselves ------ Sha. 163 

Mastiff, greyhound, mongrel, grim - - Sha. 865 

Match with the moon — a sonnet - - - Ros. 163 

Maternal grief - Wor. 112 

Mathal Nameh. (Divan, x.) - - - - Goe. 381 

Mathematical story, A - - - - Hoi. 174 

Matilda gathering flowers (from Dante) - She. 536 

— thou hast seen me start - Scott 207 

Matins - Her. 146 

Matrimonial counsels * - - - - - Mer. 246 

Matron of Jedborough, The ------ Wor. 260 

21 



Matron Q O O 

Melibceus oax. 

Matron, the children of whose love - - - Bry. 168 

Matter and spirit are as one machine - - Wor. 401 

Matthew, Gilbert, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 

Matthew - - - Wor. 416 

— Chapter vi. — a paraphrase - - - - Tho. 413 

— On passages in gospel of - - - Wes. 227, 294 
Mauchline belles Burns 39 

— lady, The— a song ----- Burns 197 
Maud - Ten. 219 

— Muller Fav. 240; Whi. 204 

Maunciples tale, The ------ Cha. 497 

Maurice Berkeley, c. in MacDuff 's Cross - Scott 484 

— Eev. F. D., To - - - - - - Ten. 251 

Max Piccolomini, a colonel, c. in The Piccolomini Col. 407 

Maximus -------- Pro. 220 

Maxwell, c. in Halidon Hill - Scott 462 

— Dr. , Epigram to Burns 183 

— John, To, on his birthday - Burns 137 

— Provost, Letter to - - - - - Burns 446 
May - - - Goe. 69; Spe. 534; Tho. 396; Wil. 292 
May - - (Percival.) Flo. 438; (Willis.) Flo. 537 

— be true what I had heard - Erne. 41 

— day - - Erne. 143 

— day, Written on - - - - - - Keats 264 

— each honest effort be Goe. 224 

— evening Bry. 325 

jnorning - Erne. 304 

morning, Composed on a — a sonnet - - Wor. 247 

-~ morning, Ode on a Wor. 433 

— morning, Song on Mil. 418 

— morning, The. (Sara J. Lippincott.) - - Flo. 433 

— queen, The - - - Ten. 42 ; Fav. 273 ; Dry. 539 

— slighted woman, turn and, as a vine - - Wil. 9 

— song -------- Goe. 49, 53 

— sun sheds an amber light ... - Bry. 218 

— To- - - Wor. 434 

Mayflower, Sailing of the ----- Lon. 200 

Mayflowers, The. (Trailing arbutus.) - - Whi. 211 

Mayor of London, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - - Sha. 469 

— of London, c. in Richard iii. - - - Sha. 556 

— of St. Albans, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - Sha. 496 

— of York, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - - Sha. 526 
May's love - - - - - - - Bro. 594 

Maze, The Cow. 608 

Me if thou in the desert hide - Wes. 274 

— let the tender office long engage - - Pope 276 

— my own fate to lasting sorrow doometh - Ten. 483 

— to whatever state the gods assign - - Cow. 37 

— too, perchance, in future days - - - Cow. 476 
Meager were his looks, sharp misery - - Sha. 736 






o o o Matron 

3"*V Melibceus 

Meaning of the look — a sonnet - - - Bro. 85 

Means not but blunders round - - - Pope 270 

— of grace - - - Wes. 177 

Meantime the moon, the rolling moon - - I. S. S. 47 

— the Trojan cuts the wat'ry way - - - Vir. 214 
Meanwhile the heinous and despiteful act - Mil. 223 

— the new-baptized, who yet remained - - Mil. 306 
Measure for measure — a comedy - - - Sha. 67 

— of time — an antique ----- Q e. 269 

— The Bro. 77 

Measures of good and evil ----- Scott 450 

Mecsenas, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 

Medal, The — a satire Dry. 144 

Medea of Euripides, Translation from - - Byron 152 

— Specimens from Cam. 128 

— Speech of the chorus Cam. 129 

Medical gentleman, Invitation to a - - Burns 92 

Medio de Fonte Leporum surgit amari aliquid Mer. 240 

Meditation on Khode Island coal - - - Bry. 95 

— Scenes favorable to. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. 645 
Meditative poems ------ Col. 168 

Medusa of Leonardo da Vinci, On the - - She. 461 

Meek Virgin Mother, more benign - - Wor. 296 

Meeting again Mer. 441 

— of American medical association - - Hoi. 132 

— of Burns' club. For the Hoi. 137 

— of friends, At a Hoi. 293 

— of Harvard alumni, 1857 - Hoi. 147 

— of national sanitary association - - Hoi. 149 

— of the bards, The Hem. 326 

— of the brothers Hem. 429 

— of the Dryads- Hoi. 71 

— of the waters, The ----- Moore 218 

— The - - - - Lon. 229; Sch. 102; Whi. 334 

— waters, The. (E. H. W.) - - - - Whi. 397 

— with time, "Slack thing," said I - - - Her. 210 
MegMerrilies Keats 265 

— of the mill— a song ... - Burns 252, 277 
Meigs, Mary Noel. June - - - Flo. 459 
Melancholy — a fragment - - - - - Col. 199 

— (To Laura.) Sch. 28 

— hours - White 425 

— Ode on Flo. 505 ; Keats 237 

— Ode to - - -Hood 160 

Melanie Wil. 217 

Melanippus and his sister Cow. 514 

Meleager, From the Greek of Moore 135 

Meles and Mincio both your urns depress ! - Cow. 551 

Melibeus, Tale of ----- Cha. 414 

Meliboeus. (Pastoral, vii.) - - - - Vir. 38 



Meliboeus QO 1 

Meredith *>-* 

Meliboeus, Tityrus and— a pastoral - - Vir. 13 

Melicoma -------- Oss. 203 

Melnoth, C., on death of Goldsmith - - Gol. 55 

Melodicus Arethusa, o'er my verse - - - She. 534 

Melologue on national music - Moore 536 

Melpomene. (Tears of the muses.) - - Spe. 583 

Melted into air, into thin air - Sha. 16 

Melun, c. in King John ----- Sha. 332 

Melvinum, Ad- ----- -Her. 559, 577 

Memoir of Alexander Pope - - - - Pope 7 

— of Edgar Allan Poe Poe 7 

— of Samuel Rogers Rog. 5 

— Spenser - - Spe. 13 

Memorabilia of last week - Moore 620 

Memorable year, 1789 Cow. 463 

Memorise matris sacrum - - - ' - - Her. 536 

— positum ---.--- Low. 381 
Memorial, A Whi. 284 

— pillar, The Hem. 198 

— thresholds — a sonnet Ros. 266 

— tribute to Dr. S. G. Howe - - - - Hoi. 299 

— verses ----- Hoi. 266 ; Low. 101 
Memorials of tour in Italy - Wor. 307 

— of tour in Scotland Wor. 252 

— of tour on the Continent - Wor. 292 

Memories Lon. 414; Whi. 141 

Memory Whi. 199; Wor. 428 

— and hope Bro. 65 

— Boon of Hem. 370 

— Ode to Ten. 13 

— of , To the - - - - - - Hem. 382 

— Pleasures of. (Hannah More.) - - - Fav. 178 

— Pleasures of Rog. 254 

— tell to me — a song. (Spanish Gypsy.) - Eliot 212 

— the warder of the brain - Sha. 792 

— Time, hope and. (Hood.) - Fav. 319 

— See also Remembrance. 

Men are April when they woo - Sha. 222 

— at sometime are masters of their fates - Sha. 766 

— call you fair and you do credit it - - Spe. 700 

— have died — but not for iove - - - Sha. 222 

— if manhood still ye claim ... - Whi. 67 

— may be read as well as books, too much - Pope 224 

— must be taught as if you taught them not Pope 56 

— now seek to explore each thing - - Sch. 256 

— of England! ------ -Cam. 207 

— of England, Song to the - - - - She. 414 

— of few words are the best men - - - Sha. 449 

— of old, The Whi. 148 

— of old. (R. M. Milnes.) - - - - - Fav. 349 



qok Meliboeus 

°^ J Mereditli 

Men of the north-land ! where's the manly spirit Whi. 75 

— of the western world — a sonnet - - - Wor. 440 

— of thought be up and doing - - - Fav. 350 

— said at vespers: " All is well! " - - - Whi. 372 

— say the sullen instrument - Low. 375 

— shut their doors against a setting sun - Sha. 745 

— some to business, some to pleasure take - Pope 237 

— were deceivers ever Sha. 118 

— who have ceased to reverence soon defy - Wor. 370 

— whose boast it is that ye Low. 56 
Menas, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 
Mend your speech a little lest it may mar - Sha. 848 
Mendez, Mrs., Birthday of - Tho. 430 
Menecrates, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 
Menelaus, Acts of - Iliad 357 

— and Paris, Duel of - - - - - - Iliad 97 

— c. in Troilus and Cressida - Sha. 622 
Menenius, Agrippa, c. in Coriolanus - - Sha. 654 
Menie — a song ------ Burns 198 

Men's evil manners live in brass - - - Sha. 614 

— judgments are a parcel of their fortunes - Sha. 930 
Menteith, c. in Macbeth - - - - - Sha. 788 
Mephistopheles, c. in Faust - Faust 22 

— Scenes from Faust She. 546 

Mercade, c. in Love's Labor's Lost - - - Sha. 135 

Merchant of Venice — a comedy - - - Sha. 181 

— of Venice — an extract. (Shakespeare.) - Fav. 290 

— The - Sch. 222 

Merciful, Sura of the P. of F. 163 

— The ------- P. of F. 15 

Mercury, c. in Prometheus Unbound - - She. 219 

— c. in Semele ------- Sch. 57 

— Hymn to - She. 509 

Mercutio, c. in Eomeo and Juliet - - - Sha. 712 

Mercy and love have met thee on thy road - Wor. 355 

— To — a sonnet ------ Q 1. 94 

MEREDITH, OWEN, Poems of: 



Adieu, Mignonne, ma belle . 234 

Adon 461 

Aloe, The 238 

Appearances 453 

Apple of Life, The ... 162 

Aristocracy 442 

Artist, The 421 

As in lone fairy lands . . . 452 

Associations 440 

Astarte 222 

At her Casement .... 442 

— Home after the Ball . . . 225 

— Home during the Ball . . 224 

Au Cafe 226 

Autumn 255 

Aux Italiens 218 

Babylonia 248 

Ball, At Home after the . . 225 



Ball, At Home during the . . 224 
Battle of the Bards, The . . 312 
Bird at Sunset, A ... 462 

Bluebeard 268 

Breakfast . 278 

Cache pour cette Nuict . . .237 

Cafe, Au 226 

Canticle of Love .... 265 

Carpe Diem 241 

Castle of King Macbeth, The . 269 
Chain to Wear, A ... 205 

Change 204 

Changes 463 

Characters: iEgisthus. 

Clytemnestra 348 

— Agamemnon . " 348 

— Cassandra . " 348 
-Clytemnestra . " 348 



Meredith 
Methought 



326 



Characters: Electra, Clytemnestra 348 

— Herald . 348 

— Orestes . "348 

— Phocian " 348 
Chess-board, The . . 191,231 

Cloud, The 191 

Clytemnestra— a play . . . 348 

Compensation 236 

Condemned Ones . . . 200 
Confession, Psalm of 294 

Contraband 460 

Cordelia 281 

— To . . . . . 283,285 

Count Rinaldo Rinaldi . . .207 
Day is down into his Bower, The 446 
Daybreak . . . . . .277 

Death-in-Life .... 270 

— of King Hacon, The . . .240 

Desire 186 

Dream, A 279 

Drop down below the orbed sea 445 
Earl's Return, The .... 403 
Elayne Le Blanc .... 447 
Elisabetta Sirani . . . .469 
England, Da . . . . .238 
Epilogue, " Change without term " 299 

Eros 189 

Espices sont a Ceres, Les . . 238 

Euthanasia 289 

Evening 461 

— before the Flight ... 424 

— in Tuscany, An .... 443 

Failure 286 

Fancy, A 193 

Farewell, A 443 

187 



Fatality 

Fatima 269 

Fisherman's Daughter, The . . 273 
Flow, freshly flow . . .468 

Forbearance 469 

Fount of Truth, The ... 242 

France, In 213 

Fugitive, The .... 271 
Ghost Story, A .... 267 
Going back again . . . 269 
Good-night in the Porch . . 397 
Guinever, Queen .... 452 
Hacon, Death of King . . .240 
Heart and Nature, The . . 251 
Helios Hyperionides . . .469 

Holland, In 255 

How the Song was made . . 454 
If Sorrow has taught me anything 232 
In the warm, black mill-pool wink- 
ing 459 

— Travel 463 

Indian Love-song . . . 190 

Italy, In 185 

Jacqueline 256 

Judicium, Paridis .... 464 
King Hermandiaz . . . 459 

— Limos 270 

— Solomon 279 

Last Interview, The . . .430 

— Message, The .... 209 

— Remonstrance, The . . . 232 

— Time that I met Lady Ruth . 245 

— Words 473 

Launcelot and Guinever, Part- 
ing of 434 

Leafless Hours . . . .255 



Legend of Lord Rosencrantz . 275 

L'Entresol, A 213 

Leoline 457 

Limos, King 270 

Love. Canticle of 265 

- letter, A 197 

Lucile .... .7 

" Ma Douce Jouvence " . . . 238 
Macbeth, Castle of King . . 269 

Macromicros 259 

Madame La Marquise . . 216 
Magic Land, The . . . .185 
Matrimonial Counsels . . 246 
Medio de Fonte Leporum surgit 

amari 240 

Meeting Again 441 

Mermaiden, The .... 442 
Metempsychosis .... 267 

Midges 243 

Mignonne, To 235 

Misanthropos .... 287 
Morning and Meeting . . . 190 
My Twenty-fourth Year, On . 255 
Mystery 260 

Neglected Heart, The . . . 453 

News 207 

Night 468 

— in the Fisherman's Hut . . 273 
North Sea. The . . . .272 

Novel, The 217 

Once 194 

"Page, suy moy " . . . 237 

Palingenesis 288 

Paradise Bird. The ... 29 
Parting of Launcelot and Guine- 
ver 434 

Peddler. The 265 

Plavs: Clytemnestra ... 348 
Portrait. The . . . . 221, 427 

Prayer, A 288 

Prensus in iEgceo .... 212 

Progress 220 

Prologue to '• The Wanderer " . 174 
Prophet. The .... 461 
Psalm of Confession . . .294 
Purple iris han^s his head . . 445 
Queen Guinever .... 452 

— of Serpents. To the . . 268 
Quiet Moment, A . . . .252 
Remembrance, A . . . 215 

Requiescat 299 

Retrospections .... 454 
Rinaldo Rinaldi, Count . . .207 
Ronsard. Peter. Translations from 237 
Root and Leaf . . . .192 

Rosencrantz, Lord. Legend of . 275 
Ruined Palace, The . . . 455 

Sea, On the 210 

Seaside Songs 455 

See-Saw 247 

Serpents. To the Queen of . . 268 
Shore. The ..... 271 

Silence 206 

Since 195 

•Small People 267 

Solomon, King .... 279 

Sorcery 234 

Soul's Loss. A . . .418 

— Science, The . . . .294 
Spring and Winter . . . 458 



327 



Meredith. 
Methought 



Storm, The 201 

Summer, The— Time that was . 446 
Sunset Fancy, A 440 

Swallow, The .... 460 
Switzerland, In . . . .251 
Tannhauser . 312 

Terra Incognita .... 214 
Thy Voice across my Spirit 

faUs 454 

Translations from Peter Ronsard 237 

Travel, In 463 

Truth, Fount of .... 242 
Tuscany, Evening in . . . 443 



ma 



Vampire, The . 
Venice . 
Vision, A . 
— of Virgins 
Voici le Bois que 

gelette 
Wanderer, The 
Want 

Warnings . 
Wealth . 

Wife's Tragedy, The 
Winter and Spring 
Ye seek Jesus of Nazareth 



Saincte An 



188 
455 

237 
172 

462 
192 
462 
424 

458 

282 



Merely this and nothing more 
Merrily, merrily hounds the bark - 

— swim we, the moon shines bright 

— swinging on brier and weed - 

Merlin 

Mermaid of Margate, The - 

— The 

Mermaiden, The ------ 

Mermaids and mermen, Song of. (Pirate.) 
Merman, The ------ 

Merops ------- 

Merrily every bosom boundeth 
Merrimack, June on the - - - - - 

— The 

Merry heart goes all the day - 

— it is in the good greenwood - - - 

— plowman, On a — a song - 

— wifes of Windsor — a comedy 
Message from the dead - 

— to the dead, The ----- 
Messala, c. in Julius Caesar - 

Messenger bird, The 

Messiad, The ------- 

Messiah — a sacred eclogue 
Metamorphoses of Ovid, Translationc from 
Metamorphosis of plants - 
Metaphysician, The - 

Metcalfe, Lord, Epitaph on - - 
Metellus Cimber, c. in Julius Caesar 

Metempsychosis 

Methinks that I could trip o'er heaviest soil 

— that to some vacant hermitage — a sonnet 

— the pictured bull we see - 

— 'twere no unprecedented feat — a sonnet 

— we do as fretful children - - - - 

Method, The 

Methought I heard a voice cry 

— I was a billow — a fragment - 

— I saw my late espoused saint - - . - 

— I saw the footsteps of a throne — a sonnet 



Poe 53 

- Scott 279 
• Scott 424 

- Bry. 229 
Erne. 106, 109 

- Hood 534 

Ten. 22 

- Mer. 442 
Scott 434 

- Ten. 21 
Erne. 113 

Moore 651 

Whi. 406 

Whi. 2Q, 480 

Sha. 319 

- Scott 136 
Burns 269 

- Sha. 42 
P. of F. 125 

- Hem. 229 

Sha. 764 

- Hem. 132 

Sch. 315 

- Pope 85 
Pope 436 

- Goe. 257 
Sch. 275 

- Mac. 211 
Sha. 764 

- Mer. 267 
Wor. 370 

- Wor. 358 
Moore 49 

- Wor. 332 

Bro. 92 

- Her. 223 
Sha. 794 

- She. 507 
Mil. 482 

- Wor. 232 



Methought 
Milton 



328 



Methought I saw the grave where Laura lay Spe. 23 

— the stars were blinking bright - - - Ing. 348 
Mexican city, Lost. (McLellan.) - - - Fav. 109 

— revolution, The ------ She. 569 

Mexico, On the treaty with - - - - Whi. 79 

Micah, On a passage in book of Wes. 291 

Michael. (Scenes from Faust.) - - - She. 546 

— c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 ----- Sha. 496 

— Sir, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - - - Sha. 382 

— a pastoral ------- Wor. 123 

Michelangelo, Sonnets from - - Erne. 244 ; Lon. 392 

Wor. 231, 318 

— (Buonarotti)— a play ---.-•- Lon. 415 
Michelangelo's kiss — a sonnet - - - - Eos. 273 
'Mid crowded obelisks and urns - - - Wor. 254 

— noon is past ; — upon the sultry mead - - Wor. 332 

— rapture — a sonnet ----- Ros. 239 

— the crowds I needs must linger - - - Flo. 466 
Middle watch, The ----- Ing. 265 

Midges - - - Mer. 243 

Midnight - Low. 15 

— by the chapel bell ! - - - - - - Eliot 33 

— hymn, A ------ - W^es. 1 

— mass for the dying year - Lon. 5 

— Ode to -------- White 336 

— past ! Not a sound of aught - - - Mer. 221 

— Written at, 1786 ------ Eog. 233 

Midst greens and shades the Catterskill - - Bry. 169 

— the noise of merriment - - - - Goe. 192 

— the rock-altars of the warrior dead - - Hem. 321 

— Tivoli's luxuriant glades - Hem. 97 
Midsummer- - - Bry. 107; Hoi. 182 

— fairies, Plea of the ----- Hood 15 

— legend. (Mary Howitt.) - Flo. 355 

— night's dream — a comedy - Sha. 161 
Might shake the saintship of an anchorite Byron 279 
Mighty art thou, because of the peaceful - Sch. 234 

— Brama, now I'll bless thee ! - - Goe. 146 

— is he and forgiving - - - - P. of F. 168 

— magician ! who on Torneo's brow - White 319 

— The ------- P. of F. 32 

Mignon, Auguste. One heart's enough for me Fav. 134 

— a ballad ------- o oe . ioo 

— aspiring to heaven. (Goethe.) - - - Fav. 204 

— To — a song - - Goe. 58 

Mignonne, To ------ - Mer. 235 

Milan, c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - Sha. 21 

Mild arch of promise, on the evening sky - Flo. 435 

— offspring of a dark - - - Flo. 63 ; White 310 

— orb who floatest through the realm - White 341 



329 



Methought 
Milton 



Mild splendor of the various-vested night ! - Col. 
Miles Standish, Courtship of Lon. 

Interview with ----- Low. 

Milk of human kindness ----- Sha. 
Mill, mill O," Remarks on Burns 

Mulennium, The Moore 

Miller, captain Patrick, Letters to - Burns 487, 

— Miss, Epigram to - - - - - Burns 

— Peter, Jr., Letter to ----- Burns 

Milleres tale, The Cha. 

Miller's daughter, The Ten. 

Millions of flaming swords - Mil. 

Milly's expiation Pro. 

Milnes, Richard M. Friendship flowe T - - Flo. 

I've wandered by the brookside - - Fa v. 

Men of old Fav. 



Youth that pursuest 

Miltiades ! thy valor best - 
MILTON, JOHN, Poems of: 



Ad Patrem 

Arcades 

At a Solemn Music 

Blindness, Sonnet to his 

Canzone— a sonnet . 

Characters: Brackly, Lord 



. 546 
429 

. 416 
480 

. 472 



Comus 434 
'-' 431 



— Comus .... 

— Dalila, wife of Samson. 

Samson Agcnistes 350 

— Egerton, Lady Alice. Comus 434 

— Egerton, Thomas . " 434 

— Harapha of Gath. 

Samson Agonistes 350 

— Manoah. " 350 

— Sabrina, a nymph. Comus 431 

— Samson. Samson Agonistes 350 
Circumcision, On the . . .415 
Comus 433 



Conscience, On New forcers of . 

Cromwell, Sonnet to, Lord Gen- 
eral 

Cyriac, this three years' day— a 
sonnet .... 

Death of an Infant 

Deceased Wife, Sonnet on his 

Elegies in Latin . 

Epigrams in Latin 

Epitaphs: Damon, To. (Latin. 



Fairfax, Lord, Sonnet to . 
Hail, native language ! . 
Horace, Fifth Ode of . 
II Penseroso .... 
In obitum praesulis eliensis 
L' Allegro . 

Lawes, H., Sonnet to . 
Lawrence, Mr., Sonnet to 
Ley, Margaret, Sonnet to . . 

Lycidas 

Manus 

Massacre in Piemont 
May Morning, Song on 
Morning of Christ's Nativ'fcy 



478 
402 
469 
425 
541 
421 
477 
480 
475 
464 
550 
479 
418 
405 



Fav. 
- Cow. 



98 

191 

81 

791 

319 

629 

494 

182 

500 

97 

28 

32 

414 

323 

431 

349 

382 

514 



Naturam non patisenium . . 543 
New Forcers of Conscience . . 470 
Nightingal % Sonnet to the . 471 
Paradise Lv,.»< - ... 15 

— Kegaiiieu . . 292 
Passion, The . . . . .412 
Per certo i bei vosfr occhi . 473 
Plays: Comus 433 

— Samson Agonistes . . . 349 

Psalms 483 

Pyrrham, Ad .... 469 
Sabrina Fair !— a song . . . 45^ 
Salsillum, Ad ... . 549 
Samson Agonistes— a dramatic 

poem 319 

Shakespeare. On . . . .419 
Sketch of John Milton . . 5 
Skinner, Cyriac. Sonnet to . . 481 
Sonnets: A book was writ of late 476 

— At the age of twenty-three . 474 

— Blindness, On his . . .480 

— Canzone 472 

— Cromwell, Lord General, To 478 

— Cyriac, this three years' day . 481 

— Deceased Wife, On his . . 4£2 

— Diodati, e te '1 diro . . . 473 

— Donna leggiadra . . .471 

— Fairfax, Lord General, To . 478 

— Giovane piano . . . 41 3 

— I did but prompt the age . .416 

— Lawes, H., To . . . .477 

— Lawrence, Mr., To 475 

— Ley. Margaret. To . . . 475 

— Massacre in Piemont . . . 479 

— Nightingale. To the . . 471 

— Per certo i bei vost'r occhi . 473 

— Qual in colle aspro . . . 472 

— Skinner, Cyriac, To . . .481 

— Thomson, Catharine, In mem- 

ory of 477 

— Vane, Sir Henry, To . . 479 

— Virtuous Young Lady, To a . 475 

— When the assault was intended 474 
Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph . 440 



Milton 3^0 

Mohammedanism ,J " U 



Sylvarum Liber .... 534 
Thomson, Catharine, Sonnet on 

memory of . . . . 477 

Time, On 414 

University Carrier, On the . 419 



Vane, Henry, Sonnet to . . .479 
Virtuous Young Lady, Sonnet to 

a . . . . . . 475 

Winchester, Marchioness of, Epi- 
taph on ... 416 



Milton, John. Echo and narcissus - - - Flo. 47 

Evening ------- Fav. 27 

March of rebel angels - Fav. 193 

Raphael's account of creation - - Fav. 71 

a sonnet Lon. 365 

Alcaics to ------ Ten. 395 

Complimentary to - • - - - Cow. 550 

Dryden's epigram on Cow. 599 

Liberties taken with remains of - - Cow. 476 

Sketch of ------ Mil. 5 

Under portrait of Dry. 320 

— thou shouldst be living at this hour — a 

sonnet ------- Wor. 272 

Milton's hair, On seeing a lock of - - - Keats 256 

— Latin and Italian poems translated - - Cow. 554 
Mimosa, The. (Darwin.) - Flo. 109 

Mind's diet, The - Hoi. 105 

Mine and yours, mine not yours - - - Erne. 36 

— are the night and morning - Eme. 209 

— be a cot beside the hill - - Rog. 242 

— be the strength of spirit — a sonnet - - Ten. 476 

— ear has rung — a sonnet - - Wor. 380 

— enemy's dog, though he had - - - Sha. 873 

— eye and heart are at a mortal war — a sonnet Sha. 1033 

— eye hath played the painter — a sonnet - Sha. 1031 

— eyes were dim with tears unshed - - She. 451 

— eyes with such an eager coveting - Dante 233 

— host of the garter - - - - - Sha. 43 

— with my heart in't ------ Sha. 12 

Minerva, Curse of Byron 199 

— To - - - She. 521 

Minerva's descent to Ithaca - - - - Odys. 7 

Ministering angels - Pro. 399 

Ministry of angels. (Spenser.) - - - Fav. 826 

Minna, To ------- Sch. 47 

Minnie and Winnie Ten. 684 

Minnisink, Burial of the ----- Lon. 10 

Minor prophet, A ----- Eliot 89 

Minotaur, The, c. in CEdipus Tyrannus - - She. 323 

Minstrel, The— a ballad ----- Goe. 100 

— boy, The - - - - - - - Moore 244 

Minstrelsy of Scottish border - - - Scott 357 

Minutely trace mans life - - - Cra. 12; Fav. 39 

Miracle, The ------- Eme. 305 

Miranda, c. in Tempest Sha. 1 

Miriam -------- Whi. 341 



q -J Milton 

001 Mohammedanism 

Mirk night o 1 December — a song - - Burns 233 

Mirror, To a. (De la Vega.) - Flo. 48 

Mirth the halls of Troy was filling - - - Sch. 152 

Misanthrope, The— a song - - - Goe. 35 

Misanthropos ------- Mer. 287 

Miscellaneous poems - - - Hoi. 71 ; Eog. 233, 330 

Mischief, thou art afoot - - - - - Sha. 779 

Mischievous bull, On a Cow. 469 

— joy — a song ------- Goe. 42 

Miser, Epigrams on a - - - - Cow. 518 

Miserable have no other medicine - - - Sha. 77 

Miserrimus ! " and neither name nor date - Wor. 245 

Misery ------- Her. 189 ; She. 412 

— acquaints a man - - - Sha. 10 
Misfortune, Sonnet to - "White 345 
Misled by fancy's meteor ray - - - Burns 63 
Mislike me not for my complexion - - - Sha. 185 

Miss , Letters to Burns 349, 497 

, To ------- Moore 78 

— Kilmansegg and her precious leg - - Hood 187 

— Susan B— ckf— d, To - Moore 180 
Missions and travels— a sonnet - - - Wor. 359 
Mistakes, The," Prologue to - Dry. 506 
Mistletoe, Poesy of the Flo. 197 

— Under the ------- Flo. 198 

Mistress, At the grave of his - - - - White 306 

— of herself though China falls - - - Pope 238 
Misty moonlight, faintly falling - - - Flo. 161 
Mitchell, collector, To * - - - - Burns 147 

Letter to - - - - - - - Burns 456 

Mitford, Mary Russell, To Bro. 73 

Mithridates ------- Erne. 30 

— at Chios Whi. 266 

— king of Pontus," — an epilogue - - - Dry. 517 
Mitto tibi sanam non pleno ventre salutem - Mil. 525 
Mitylene, Governor of (Lysimachus), c. in Per. Sha. 977 
Moakibat, The - - - - - - P. of F. 55 

Moan, O ye autumn winds ! - - - - Pro. 90 

Mob of gentlemen who wrote with ease - - Pope 301 

Mock me no more with love's beguiling dream Moore 82 

Mocking the air with colors - Sha. 351 

Modern love Keats 275 

— patriot, The Cow. 391 

Modest man must needs endure - - - Goe. 223 

— request, A - - Hoi. 39 

Modifications of flower language - - - Flo. 221 

Mceris, Lycidas and — a pastoral - - - Vir. 46 

Moestus eram, et tacitus nullo comitante - Mil. 516 

Moffat Inn, Epigram at Burns 179 

Mohammedanism— Pearls of the faith - P. of F. ] 



Moir oqq 

Moore 00 * 

Moir, D. M. Forget-me-not - - - Flo. 89 

WaH-flower, The - Flo. 84 

Mole, The - - Sch. 322 

Molina, Alcayde of Bry. 145 

Molinos, Three silences of Lon. 382 

Moloch in State street Whi. 160 

Moment, The Sch. 265 

Monadnoc ' - . - Erne. 58 

— from afar - Erne. 310 

— from Wachuset Whi. 279 

Monarch love ! resistless boy - - - Moore 58 

Monarch's death-bed, A - - - - - Hem. 407 

— Rules for— an epigram ----- Goe. 226 
Monasteries, Dissolution of the— a sonnet - Wor. 366 
Monastery of old Bangor — a sonnet - - - Wor. 356 
Monastic domes, following my downward way Wor. 379 

— power. Abuse of — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 366 

— voluptuousness — a sonnet - Wor. 366 
Monboddo, Elegy on Miss Burnet of - Burns 134 
Moncontour, Battle of - Mac. 153 
Money — an aphorism ----- Lon. 93 

— thou bane of bliss and source of woe - Her. 162 
Monitions of the unseen, The - Ing. 415 
Monk of Cassat-Maggiore - Lon. 304 

— of St. Gall, Paraphrase from - - - Mac. 203 
Monkes tale, The ------ Cha. 455 

Monkey-martyr, The ------ Hood 549 

Monks and schoolmen — a sonnet - - - Wor. 363 

— of Bangor's march - Scott 412 

Monochord, The — a sonnet - Ros. 164, 265 

Monody by J. Blackett .... - White' 230 

— on a lady famed for caprice - - - Burns 142 

— on death of Chatterton Col. 47 

— on death of R. B. Sheridan - - - Byron 275 

— on Oliver Goldsmith ----- Gol. 58 

Mont Blanc - She. 400 

is the monarch ----- Byron 88 

Montagu, Lady — on her picture - - - Pope 368 

— Mary Wortley, To ----- - Pope 367 

— Mrs. Basil. See Benson. Burns 487 
Montague, c. in Romeo and Juliet - - - Sha. 712 

— Lady, c. in Romeo and Juliet - - - Sha. 712 

— Marquis of, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - - • Sha. 526 
Montagu's, Mrs. , feather hangings - - Cow. 456 
Montalba, c. in Vespers of Palermo - - Hem. 493 
Montano of Cyprus, c. in Othello - - - Sha. 879 
Monte Cassino, Italy - Rog. 158 ; Lon. 360 
Montenegro— a sonnet ----- Ten. 721 
Montes glaciales, in Oceano Germanico - - Cow. 506 
Montgomery, James. Common lot, The - Fav. 81 



333 



Moir 
Moore 



Montgomery, James. Home- ■.- - -.■■ Fav. 
Laurustinus, The Flo. 

— Sir John, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - Sha. 

— true the common lot Byron 
Montgomery's Peggy— a song - - - Burns 
Month after month the gathered rains - - She. 
Montjoy, c. in Henry v. - Sha. 
Montpensier, duke of, To - Moore 



337 

298 
526 
166 
193 
406 
439 
163 
29 
63 
322 
40 
376 
148 
310 
354 
384 
395 
522 



Montrose, Execution of - - - - - Ayt. 
Monument mountain Bry. 

— of Moor the robber ----- s c h. 

— of our own age's shame Sch. 

Monumental inscription - - - - - Hem. 

Monuments, Church Her. 

Monviedro, c. in Remorse - Col. 

Mood, A Low. 

Moods — a sonnet Lon. 

Moon and Venus, The - - - - - Wor. 

— Hymn to the ------ gh e . 

— Ode to the - Hood 155 ; White 341 

— of harvest, herald mild - White 269 

— On the— a sonnet ------ Wor. 

— Song to the Goe. 

— Sonnet to thee ----- White 

— Sura of the - - - - - - P. of F. 

— The -■ ' - - - Low. 9; Hood; Flo. 

— To the - - - Scott 187; She. 506; Wor. 238, 395 

— Waning — a fragment ----- She. 506 

Moonbeam, To the ------ She. 

Moonlight Cam. 308; Lon. 

— Daylight and Lon. 

Moonstar, The — a sonnet ----- Ros. 
Moore, Dr., Letters to Burns 365, 366, 373, 380, 425 

457, 465 

— John, To - Pope 372 



238 

63 

344 

139 

480 



566 
409 
216 
241 
431 



— Sir John, Burial of. (Wolfe.) 

— Miss, Epistle to - 
MOORE, THOMAS, Poems of: 



Fav. 
Moore 



35 
117 



After the Battle d . 230 

All in the family way . . . 622 

— that's bright must fade . . 522 
Almighty God ! . . . . 345 
Amatory Colloquy between Bank 

and Government . . .615 
Anacreon, Odes of ... 22 
Anacreontic to a Plumassier . 325 
Anacreontics . . 76, 161, 176, 327 
Angel of Charity . . . .346 
Aristippus, Philosopher . . 164 
As a beam o'er the face of the 

Waters .... 218 

— down in the sunless retreats . 344 

— slow our Ship .... 255 

— Vanquished Erin . . . 272 
Aspasia 147 



At Night 102 



242 
143 



349 

77 



647 



the mid hour of night 
Atkinson, Joseph, Epistle to . 
Austrians entering Naples 
Avenging and Bright 
Awake, arise, thy light is come 
Ballad, The .... 
— Stanzas .... 
Ballads and Songs . 
Bank and Government— a colloquy 61 5 
Before the Battle . . . .229 
Behold the Sun .... 346 
Believe me, if all those endearing 

young charms ... 225 
Bird let loose in Eastern skies . 341 

Birthday of Mrs. ... 94 

Black and Blue Eyes . . . 64f 



Lloore 



334 



Blue Stocking, The— a comic opera 298 
Boat Glee— a song . . . .298 
Book of Follies, To the . . 101 
Boston Frigate, To the . . .204 
Boy with a Watch, To a . . 69 
Bright be thy Dreams! . . . 529 
But who shall see . . . 345 
By that lake whose gloomy shore 23? 
Cambridge Ballad . . . 626 
Canadian Boat-song . . .198 
Canonization of St. B— tt— rw— rth 623 

Cara, To 120 

Case of Libel .... 640 
Castilian Maid, The . . . 651 
Catalogue, The .... 90 
Catullus, Imitation of . . . 105 

— Translation from . . . 603 
Cease, oh, cease to tempt . .647 
Ceres, Ode to . . . .616 

Charity 102 

Church and State — a fable . . 575 

Cloe, To 152 

Cloris and Fanny . . . .182 
Cohoes Falls, Written at . . 181 
Come, chase that starting tear 

away 528 

— not, O Lord! .... 344 

— o'er the Sea 248 

— rest in this bosom . . . 252 

— send round the wine . . . 224 

— ye Disconsolate . . . 348 

— Common Sense and Genius . 526 
Corn and Catholics . . .640 
Correspondence— lady and gen- 
tleman .... 332 

Corruption— an epistle . . .276 
Cotton and Corn .... 635 
Country Dance and Quadrille . 604 
Crystal Hunters, The ... 529 
Cupid's Lottery . . . .300 
Day of Love, The .... 653 
Deadman's Island, On passing . 203 
Dear Fanny 647' 

— Harp of my Country . . . 254 
Death of a Lady, On the . . 80 

— of Mr. P— r— v— 1 . . . 595 

— of Richard B. Sheridan . . 594 
Desmond's Song .... 273 
Devil among the Scholars . . 609 
Dialogue between a sovereign and 

a one-pound note . . 617 
Diary of a Politician, Extracts 

from 325 

Did not . ... 104 
Dissolution of the Holy Alliance 569 
Dodsworth. Roger .... 628 
Donkey and his Panniers . . 637 
Dost thou remember? . . . 524 
Doth not a meeting like this . 274 
Dream, A 100 

— of Antiquity, A ... 138 

— of Turtle, A 636 

Dreams 196 

Drink of this Cup . . . .263 

— to her 226 

East Indian, The .... 656 

Echo 266 

Elegiac Stanzas . . 73, 79, 106 
Epicurean, Poems from the . . 668 
Epigrams . . . 326, 327, 328 
Epilogue to the tragedy of Ina . 598 



Epistles 110 

Erin, O Erin 226 

— the Tear and the Smile . . 214 
Eveleen's Bower .... 222 
Evening in Greece, An . . 659 
Evil Spirit of the Woods . . 182 
Expostulation to Lord King . 618 
Extinguishers, The . . . 579 
Fables for the Holy Alliance . 568 
Fairest! put on awhile . . . 270 
Fall of Hebe, The . . .171 
Fallen is thy throne . . . 340 

Fancy 602 

Fanny, dearest .... 103 

— To 146 

Fare thee well, thou lovely one . 523 
Farewell ! but whenever you wel- 
come 246 

— Theresa! 533 

Fill the bumper fair . . .253 
Fionnuala, Song of 224 

Fire-fly, To the . . . . 152 

— Worshipers, The. (Lalla Rookh.) 426 
First Angel's story .... 542 
Flourish of Trumpet ... 537 
Flow on, thou shining river . . 522 
Fly and the Bullock— a fable . 573 

— not yet 216 

Flying-fish, To the . . .117 
Forbes, Lord Viscount, Epistle to 156 
Forget not the Field ... 260 
Fortune-teller, The . . .264 
Fragment of a character . . 608 

— of Mythological hymn to Love 162 
Fragments of College Exercises 69 
From Life without Freedom . 648 

— the French ... 646 
Fudge Family in Paris . . . 483 
Fum and Hum, the two birds of 

Royalty 612 

Gayly sounds the Castanet . 527 

Gazel 313 

Genius and Criticism . . 607 

— of Harmony .... 129 
Ghost of Miltiades, The . . 639 
Go forth to the Mount . . .352 

— let me weep ! . . . 343 

— now and dream .... 533 

— then, 'tis vain . . . . 529 

— where Glory waits thee . . 213 
Grecian Girl's dream of the Bles- 
sed Islands .... 148 

Greece, Evening in 659 

Greek air 537 

Hark ! the vesper hymn is stealing 525 

— 'tis the breeze .... 350 
Harp that once through Tara's 

halls 215 

Has sorrow thy young days shaded 248 
Hear me but once . . . 528 
Here sleeps the bard ! . . . 535 

— take my heart, 'twill be safe 655 
Here's the Bower . . . .648 
High-priest of Apollo to Virgin of 

Delphi 190 

Holland, Lady, To 597 

Holy Alliance, Fables for the . 568 

— be the Pilgrim's sleep . . 648 
Horace, Odes of 328, 337 
How dear to me the hour . . 220 

— lightly mounts the Muse's wings 351 



335 



Moore 



How tr't has the Banshee cried . 

— ort when watching stars . 
Hume, Thomas, Epistle to . 
Humorous and Satirical poems . 
Hymn of a Virgin at Delphi 

— of welcome after the recess 
I never give a kiss 

— saw from the beech . 

— saw the moon rise clear 

— saw thy form in youtnf ul prime 

— wish I was by that dim lake 
I'd mourn the hopes . 

If thou'lt be mine .... 

Ill omens 

Illustration of a bore 
Impromptu .... 70, 

— after a visit to Mrs. . 

— on leaving some friends . 
In the morning of life . 
Ina— a tragedy, Epilogue to 
Incantation, An .... 

Inconstancy 

Insurrection of the Papers . 
Intercepted Dispatch, Copy of . 

— Letters 

Intolerance— a satire . 
Introductory Music . 

Invisible Girl, To the . 

Irish Melodies 

— peasant to his mistress . 

Is it not sweet to think hereafter 
It is not the tear at this moment 

shed 

Joke versified, A . 

Joys of Youth, how fleeting . 

— that pass away 

Julia, To . . . 70, 79, 82, 
Juvenile Poems .... 
King Crack and his Idols 
Kiss a Fantique, A 

— The 

Ladies' eyes, The 

Lady H , To, on an old ring . 

— To a, on her singing 

— To a, with manuscript poems . 
Lady's Common-place book, In a 
Lake of the Dismal Swamp — a 

ballad 

L ilia Rookh— an oriental romance 
Legacy, The . . . . . 
L jsbia hath a beaming eye . 
JLet Erin remember the days of old 
Light of the Harem. (Lalla 

Rookh.) .... 

— sounds the Harp» 

Like a snuffers this loving old dame 

— morning when her early breeze 
Literary advertisement . 

Litt'e Grand Lama 

— Man and Little Soul . 
Looking-glasses— a fable . 
Lord, who shall bear that day? 
Love and Hope . 

— and Hymen . 

— and Marriage . 

— and Reason . 

— and the Novice 

— and the Sun-dial 

— and Time . 

— is a hunter-boy . 

— my Mary, dwells with thee . 



Love wandering through the gold- 
en maze .... 650 
Love's light summer cloud . . 650 

— of the Angels .... 540 

— Young Dream . ... 233 
Lowe, Sir Hudson, To 608 

Lying 160 

M. P., or the Blue Stocking . 298 
Marchioness Dowager of D— 11, To 

the 127 

Meeting of the Waters, The . . 218 
Meleager, From the Greek of . 135 
Melologue on National Music . 536 
Memorabilia of Last Week . 620 
Merrily every bosom boundeth . 651 
Millennium, The . . . .629 
Minstrel-boy, The . . .244 

Miss , To .... 78 

— Susan B— ck'— 1, To . . .180 
Montpensier, Duke of, To . . 1C3 
Moore, Miss, Epistle to . . . 117 
Moral positions— a dream . . 619 

Morality 96 

Morgan, George, Epistle to . 132 
Mountain Sprite, The . . .271 
Mrs. , To . . 80, 177, 197 

— Bl— h— n, To . . . .166 

— M., To 84 

Music, On 232 

My birthday 602 

— gentle Harp . ■ . .254 

— harp has one unchanging theme 526 

— mother, To 603 

Natal Genius, The ... 95 

National Airs 521 

Nature's Labels .... 81 
Nay, tell me not . . . .238 
Ne'er ask the Hour . . . 261 

— talk of Wisdom's gloomy 

schools .... 535 
Nets and Cages .... 532 
New Costume of the Ministers . 331 

— Creation of Peers . . . 625 
News for Country Cousins . . 634 
Night of Music .... 658 

— Thought, A 73 

No, not more welcome . . 249 

Nonsense 80 

Now let the Warrior . . .651 
Nubian Girl, Song of the . . 670 
O, banquet not .... 266 

— blame not the bard . . . 227 

— breathe not his name . . 215 

— call it by some better name . 656 

— come to me when daylight sets 524 

— days of youth .... 530 

— doubt me not .... 246 

— Fair! oh, Purest! . . .346 

— for the swords of former time ! 261 

— had Ave some bright little isle . 245 

— lady fair! 651 

— no— not e'en when first we loved 526 

— remember the time . . 651 

— see those cherries . . . 654 

— soon return ! 652 

— teach me to love thee . . 347 

— the Shamrock .... 241 

— the sight entrancing . . . 268 

— think not my spirits are always 217 

— Thou who dryest the mourner's 

tears 341 



I 



oore 
ora 



336 



O where's the Slave . . .252 
— ye Dead! 264 



— yes, so well, so tenderly 

— yes, when the bloom 
Occasional Address 
Ode in Greek 

— to Goddess Ceres 

— to the Sublime Porte 
Odes 

— of Anacreon . 

— to Nea, at Bermuda 
O'Donoghue's Mistress 
Oft in the stilly night 
One bumper at Parting 

— dear smile . 
Origin of the Harp 
ORuark, Song of . 
Our first young love . 
Pale broken flower . 
Paradise and the Peri 

Rookh.) . 
Parallel, The 

Parody of a celebrated letter 
Peace and Glory . 

— be around thee . 

— to the slumberers ! . 
Peers, New creation of . 
Periwinkles and the Locusts 



(Lalla 



65: 
652 
333 

15 
616 
633 
110 

22 
133 
265 
524 
242 
653 
233 
244 
658 
656 

413 

262 
322 
123 
52i 
531 
625 
640 



Petition, The 631 

Philadelphia, On leaving . . 170 

Phillis, To 78 

Poco-curante Society, Song for 606 
Poor wounded heart! . . . 65 j 
Pretty Rose-tree, The . . 657 
Prince's Day, The . . . : £3 1 
Quick ! we have but a se 3ond . 270 
Raisdon, Lady Charlotte, To . 199 
Reason, Folly and Beauty . 523 
Reflection at Sea, A . . .106 
Re-enforcements for Lord Welling- 
ton 333 

Remember the Glories of Brien 

the brave .... 214 

— thee ! 257 

Remonstrance 601 

Resemblance, The ... 135 
Reuben and Rose . . .92 

Rhymes on the Road ... 581 
Rich and Rare were the gems she 

wore 218 

Ring, The 85, 131 

Rings and Seals .... 178 

Romance 597 

Rondeau 73 

Rosa, To ... . 74, 78, 81 
Row, gently here . . .530 

Sacred Songs 339 

Sail on, sail on . . .262 

Saint Senanus and the Lady . . 219 
Sale of the Tools. The . . 334 
Satirical and Humorous Poems 608 
Say, what shall be our sport to-day 529 
Second Angel's Story . . . 548 
See, the dawn from Heaven . 532 
Shall the Harp then be silent . 267 
She is far from the land . . 237 

— sung of Love . . . .274 
Sheridan, Richard B., Death of 594 

Shield, The 99 

Shine out, stars! let heaven as- 
semble 657 



Should those fond hopes . . 523 

Shrine, The 89 

Since first thy word ... 350 
Sing— sing— Music was given . 275 
Skeptic, The— a satire . . 293 

Skepticism 603 

Slave, The 644 

Snake. The 170 

Snow Spirit, The .... 140 
So warmly we met .... 522 
Song of Fionnuala ... 224 

— of O'Ruark .... 244 

— of War 653 

Songs 72, 84, 88, 91, 98, 103, 106, 108, 

125, 161, 182, 661 
Sound the Loud Timbrel . . 343 
Sovereign and a One-pound Note 

—a dialogue . . . 617 

Spanish Ah- 538 

Speculation; A .... 645 
Spencer, W. R., Epistle to . .185 
Squinting Poetess, On a . . 645 

Stanzas 114 

Steerman's Song, The . . .151 
Storm at Sea, In a . . .136 
Strangf ord. Lord, Epistle to . 112 
Sublime Porte, Ode to . . 638 

— was the warning . . . 225 
Surprise, The .... 80 
Sweet Innisfallen . . . .269 

Swiss Air 538 

Svlph's Ball, The . . . .599 

Sympathy 83 

Take back the Virgin page . . 220 

— hence the bowl . . . 533 

Tear, The 100 

Tell her, oh, teU her ... 657 

— tale Lyre, The . . . .115 
Temple to Friendship, A . .521 
Thee, thee, only thee! . . .266 
Then, fare thee well . . .527 
There comes a time . . . 525 

— is a bleak desert . . . 349 
They know not my Heart . . 273 

— may rail at this life . . 260 
Third Angel's Story . . .562 
This life is all checkered with 

pleasures . . . .240 

— world is all a fleeting show . 339 
Those evening bells . . . 522 
Thou art, O God. the life and light 339 
Though the last glimpse, of Erin 217 

— 'tis all but a dream . . . 534 
Three Doctors, The . . .630 
Tighe, Mrs. Henry, To . 184 
Time I've lost in wooing . . 251 
"Tis gone and forever . . . . 252 

— sweet to think .... 230 

— the Last Rose of Summer . 243 

— when the cup is smiling . . 534 

To 90, 102, 108, 135, 175, 207 

. . 155, 189, 193, 195 

,1801 .... 124 

's Picture . . . .162 

— - day. dearest ! is ours . . 655 
Tom'Cribb, to Big Ben, Epistle 

from 614 

Torch of Libertv, The . . .572 
Trifles . . . . .320 

Tuft-hunter, Epitaph on a . .631 
Turf shall be my fragrant shrine 342 



337 



Moore 
More 



When Love was a child . . 528 

— 'midst the gay I meet . . 653 

— on the lip the sigh delays . 655 

— the first summer bee . . 534 

— thou shalt wander . . .531 

— through the piazzetta . . 532 

— twilight dews .... 654 
Whene'er I see those smiling 

eyes 258 

Where is your dwelling, ye 

sainted? 351 

— shall we bury our shame? . 535 
While gazing on the moon's light 228 

— History's Muse ... 250 

— is the maid? . . . .340 
Who"ll buy my love-knots? . 531 

Woman 192 

Wreath and the Chain . . 153 
Wreathe the Bowl . . . .257 
Wreaths for the Ministers . . 327 
You remember Ellen . . . 247 
Young Jessica .... 654 

— May Moon, The . . . .243 

— Muleteers of Grenada . . 657 

— Rose, The 65i 



'Twas one of those Dreams . . 269 
Two Cupbearers, Song of the . 669 
Twopenny Post-bag, The . . 302 
Tyrolese Song of Liberty . . 651 
Valley of the Nile, The . . . 668 
Vase, The . .... 153 

Veiled Prophet of Khorassan. 

(Lalla Rookh.) . ... 359 
Virgin of Delphi, To . . .190 
Vision, A 633 

— of Philosophy, A ... 194 
War against Babylon . . . 353 

Warning, A 188 

We may roam through this world 222 
Weep, Children of Israel . .318 

— not for those . . . .341 

— on, weep on .... £33 
Wellington and the ministers . 338 
Were not the sinful Mary's tears . 344 
What the bee is to the floweret 239 
What's my thought like? ■ . 327 
When cold in the earth . . 258 

— first I met thee . . . .249 

— first that smile . . . 530 

— he who adores thee . . . 215 

Moore, Thomas. Constancy - - - - Flo. 150 

Garland, The ----- - Flo. 144 

Jasmine, The ----- - Flo. 121, 123 

Last rose of summer Flo. 103 

Love and reason ----- Fav. 282 

Ode from Anacreon Flo. 104 

Sunflower — constancy - - - - Flo. 150 

Sweet remembrances - Fav. 214 

After a lecture on Hoi. 128 

Moorish bridal song - Hem. 123 

Moorland blossoms. (Eliza Cook.) - - Flo. 171 

Moor's song. (The Eobbers.) - Sch. 337 

Mopsa, c. in Winter's Tale - Sha. 304 

Moral bully, The Hoi. 103 

— essays in five epistles Pope 223 

— poet, The ------- - Sch. 269 

— positions — a dream Moore 619 

— welfare, The Whi. 57 

Moralist, To a Sch. 53 

Morality ------- Moore 96 

Moralizer corrected, The - Cow. 428 

Moravian nuns, Hymn of Lon. 8 

Morcar, c. in Harold ----- Ten. 615 
More, Hannah. Pleasures of memory - - Fav. 178 
Province of woman - Fav. 238 

— in sorrow than in anger - Sha. 815 

— is thy due than more than all can - - Sha. 790 

— matter for a May morning - Sha. 295 

— matter with less art ----- Sha. 821 

— of this madness, more ----- Wes. 302 

— peril in thine eye ----- Sha. 720 

— righteous God, my doom I bear - - - Wes. 234 

22 



More qqo 

Mother's ^^° 

More than most fair, full of the living fire - Spe. 688 

— water glideth by the mill than wots - - Sha. 693 
Morford. Home to rest in Fav. 265 
Morgan, George, Epistle to - - - Moore 132 
Morganni Nameh. (Divan, i.) - - Goe. 363 

Morgarten, Battle of Hem. 322 

Morituri salutamus Lon. 354 

Morn of May ------- Ing. 270 

— breaketh in the east, the purple clouds - Wil. 12 

— in russet mantle clad - - - - - Sha. 812 

— in the east ! How coldly fair - - - Wil. 279 
Morning. (Caroline A. Briggs.) - - ' - Flo. 370 

— among the hills. (Percival.) - - - Fav. 87 

— and meeting - - Mer. 190 

— at last 1 at last the lingering day - - Mer. 348 

— Chronicle, editor of, Letter to Burns 504 

— dream, The ------- Cow. 450 

— early. (Miss A. E. Starr.) - - ' - - Flo. 407 

— exercise, A - Wor. 141 

— glory, The. (Maria Lowell.) - - - Flo. 359 

— hymn, A - Wes. 331 

— in the country Tho. 396 

— lament - Goe. 194 

— meditations Hood 289 

— of Christ's nativity Mil. 405 

— thought, A ------ Hood 262 

— To the - - - - - - - - White 25 

— watch, The - Ing. 268 

Morocco, Prince of, c. in Merchant of Venice Sha. 181 

Morpeth. To a jasmine-tree - Flo. 120 

Morrison, Mr. , Letter to - - Burns 418 

Morrow's message, The — a sonnet - - - Eos. 245 

Mortal mixed of middle clay - Erne. 33 

— warp and mortal woof ----- Scott 426 

Mortality, For the yearly bill of - - - Cow. 441 

Mortals ! around your destined heads - - Cow. 44 

Morte d'Arthur - - - - - - Ten. 60 

Mortham's history ------ Scott 207 

Mortification ------- Her. 187 

Mortimer, earl, Epistle to - - - - - Pope 333 

— Edmund, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 382 
c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - - - - - Sha. 469 

— Lady, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 382 

— Sir Hugh, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - - - Sha. 526 

— Sir John, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - - Sha. 526 
Morton, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 409 

— John, c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 556 
Moscon, c. in Magico Prodigioso - - - She. 537 

Moschus, From She. 533 

Moscow, Burning of— a sonnet - Wor. 283 



q o q • More 

°<~ y Mother's 

Moscow, Retreat from (anon.) - - - Fav. 248 

Moses, c. in CEdipus Tyrannus - - . - - She. 323 

— Thomas P. Flowers ----- Fav. 254 

— and the angel P. of F. 149 

— might lead to Jordan's tide - - - Wes. 257 

— when dead, himself survives - - - Wes. 173 

— who spake with God as with his friend - Eliot 133 

Mosquito, To a Bry. 89 

Mosshouse, Inscription for a - - - - Cow. 497 

— rose, The. (Krummacher.) - Flo. 105 
Mosses, On receiving a basket of - - - Whi. 151 
Mossgiel. (Wordsworth.) - Flo. 431 
Most authors steal their works - - - Pope 57 

— brisk and giddy-paced ----- Sha. 288 

— delicate Ariel ! submissive thing - - Hood 164 

— forcible, feeble ------ sha. 424 

— glorious Lord of life ! that, on this day - Spe. 698 

— glorious rose, you are ----- Flo. 95 

— glorious sunset ! and a ray - - - - Wor. 353 

— happy letters ! framed by skillful trade - Spe. 700 

— high and mighty czar of all flesh - - Sch. 293 

— modern wits such monstrous fools have Dry. 515 

— noble Lord, the pillar of my life - - - Spe. 27 

— potent, grave and reverend signiors - Sha. 882 

— quick to pardon sins is he - - P. of F. 76 

— sweet it is with unuplifted eyes — a sonnet Wor. 411 

— wretched men are cradled - She. 214 
Moth, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 161 

— c. in Love's Labor's Lost -.._-- Sha. 135 
Mother and child ! whose blending tears - Hem. 198 

— and poet Bro. 619 

— and son Goe. 310 ; She. 567 

— darksome, mother dread -■--.- Scott 435 

— Hubberd's tale. (Prosopopoia.) - - Spe. 598 

— is this the darkness of the end - - - Ros. 153 

— Letters to his White 124, 132, 149, 164, 174, 187, 191 

— of grace and mercy ----- p ra 387 

— of Hermes ! and still youthful Maia ! - Keats 264 

— of light ! how fairly dost thou go Hood 155 ; Flo. 480 

— of our own dear mother - Fav. 354 

— of the fair delight ------ Eos. 32 

— showing portrait of her child - Ing. 188 

— Sonnet to his White 378 

— Sonnet to my Poe 77 

— The - - Cra. 80 

— to her child - - Wil. 64 

— to her infant — an epigram - - - Burns 187 

— To my, from the Apennines - - - Wil. 63 

— whose virgin bosom was uncrost - - - Wor. 367 
Mother's ghost, The Lon. 312 



Mother's Q,1A 

Muse 04U 

Mother's hymn, The - - - Bry. 267; Wes. 120 

— lament, A Burns 114 

— of the names P. of F. 142 

— picture, On receipt of his - Cow. 471 

— return, The ------- Wor. 81 

— secret, A ------ - Hoi. 117 

Motherwell, William. Jeannie Morrison - Fav. 339 

Song of the cavalier - Poe 49 

Motions and means on land and sea - - Wor. 409 

Motives — a song ------ Goe. 36 

Motley, John Lothrop, Parting to - - - Hoi. 164 

— this congregation is Goe. 370 

Motley's the only wear ----- Sha. 213 

Motteux, Mr., To - - - - - - Dry. 284 

Motto for a clock ------ Cow. 456 

Mottoes. (Abbot.) ------ Scott 430 

— (Annie of Geierstein.) ----- Scott 455 

— (Antiquary.) - Scott 403 

— (Betrothed.) - Scott 449 

— (Black dwarf.) Scott 405 

— (Bride of Lammermoor.) - Scott 418 

— (Castle dangerous.) Scott 456 

— (Count Eobert of Paris.) - Scott 456 

— (Fair maid of Perth.) ----- Scott 454 

— (Fortunes of Nigel.) ----- Scott 442 

— (Ivanhoe.) ------- Scott 423 

— (Kenilworth.) - - • Scott 432 

— (Monastery.) - Scott 428 

— (Old Mortality.) ------ Scott 406 

— (Peveril of the peak.) ----- Scott 443 

— (Pirate.) -------- Scott 438 

— (Quentin Durward.) ----- Scott 444 

— (Rob Roy.) - - Scott 412 

— (St. Ronan's well.) ----- Scott 447 

— (Talisman.) - - - - - - - Scott 452 

— (Woodstock.) - Scott 453 

Mouldy, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 409 

Moultrie, J. Violets ----- Flo. 41 

Mountain and squirrel — a fable - - - Erne. 71 

— castle, The— a song ----- Goe. 59 

— church. (Mrs. Gilman.) - Fav. 257 

— daisy, To a - Burns 80 

— fires, The -------- Hem. 249 

— From the — a song ----- Goe. 52 

— gorses, ever golden - - - Bro. 108 ; Flo. 512 

— pictures. Parts i. and ii. ... Whi. 278 

— song - - Sch. 114 

— sprite, The Moore 271 

— village - Goe. 240 

Mountaineer and poet — a sonnet - - - Bro. 91 



oa -| Mother's 

3*1 Muse 

Mountains, Hint from the - - - - Wor. 150 

— of sorrow, I have heard your moans - Ing. 438 
Mounted on Kyrat strong and fleet - - - Lon. 377 
Mourn, hapless Caledonia, mourn - - Burns 318 

— not for Venice — let her rest - - - Moore 584 

— O rejoicing heart I ----- . - Pro. 88 

— shepherd, near thy old gray stone - - Wor. 490 
Mourner for the Barmecides - Hem. 394 

— On a - - - Ten. 392 

Mournful groans, as when a tempest - - Sch. 35 

Mourning and longing Cow. 78 

— mother, The Bro. 290 

— muse of Thestylis ------ Spe. 633 

Mouse, To a - - - - - - - Burns 44 

Move eastward, happy earth - Ten. 118 

— through the bowering hops, O lovers - Ing. 520 
Moved with the starting of a woman's tear - Wil. 264 
Mowbray, Lord, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - Sha. 409 

— Thomas, c. in Richard ii. - - - - Sha. 356 

Mozart's requiem ------ Hem. 426 

Mr. Orator Puff had two tones in his voice Moore 301 

Mrs. , To Moore 80, 177, 197 

— Bl— h— d, To ----- Moore 166 

— M., To - - Moore 84 

Mrs. See surnames in general alphabet. 

Much ado about nothing — a comedy - - Sha. Ill 

— do I need and therefore will I ask - - Cra. 387 

— have I traveled in the realms of gold - Keats 246 

— must he toil who serves the immortal - Lon. 342 

— on my early youth I love to dwell - - Col. 39 
Muhammad in the cemetery - - - P. of F. 77 
Muhammad's journey to heaven - - - P. of F. 50 
Muiopotmos ; or, fate of the butterfly - - Spe. 566 
Muir, Robert, Letters to Burns 351, 356, 359, 361, 381, 401 
Miiller, Maud ------- Whi. 204 

Mulock, Dinah Maria. Douglas, Douglas - Fav. 402 

Labor and rest - - - - - - Fav. 410 

Mundis et mundanis, De - Her. 572 

Munere dum nobis prodes, libroque fufuris - Her. 588 

Murder though it have no tongue - - Sha. 825 

Murdered traveler, The Bry. 73 

Murdoch, John, Letters to - Burns 343, 457 

— Patrick, To the Rev. ----- Tho. 447 
Mure, John, c. in Auchindrane - - - Scott 493 

— Philip, c. in Auchindrane - Scott 493 

Murmurs Pro. 105 

Musa Hoi. 163 

Musagetes, The - G-oe. 193 

Muse hide his name of whom I sing - - - Cow. 466 

— of my Spenser, who so well could sing - Cra. 489 



$™ 342 

Muse, sing the deeds of the golden Aphrodite She. 520 

— 'tis enough ; at length thy labor - - Pope 375 

— To the - . - White 256 

Muse's mirror, The — an antique - - - Goe. 271 

— revenge, The - - - - - - - Sch. 305 

— son, The — a song Goe. 26 

— Tears of the ------- Spe. 581 

Music - - Moore 232; She. 477, 502; Whi. 268 

— all powerful o'er the human mind - - Whi. 268 

— as first by heaven designed - - - Wes. 269 

— Church - Her. 149 

— grinders, The Hoi. 9 

— of nature. (John Pierpont.) - - - Fav. 22 

— of yesterday ------ Hem. 366 

— perplexed — a sonnet ----- Bro. 84 

— Power of Wor. 172 

— Remembering - Low. 9 

— resembles poetry, in each - - - - Pope 44 

— Stanzas for ------ Byron 258 

— to hear, why hear'st thou music sadly - Sha. 1029 

— True use of ------ Wes. 93 

— when soft voices die - - - - - She. 438 

Musica sacra, De - Her. 569 

Musical instrument Bro. 607 

Musician's hymn Wes. 95 

— tale, The Lon. 246, 280, 312 

Musing on the roaring ocean — a song - Burns 209 

Musings near Aquapendent - - - - Wor. 308 

Musketaquid - - - - - - Erne. 124 

Must I not do all I can? Wes. 175 

— noble Hastings immaturely die - - - Dry. 19 

— thou go, my glorious chief - - - Byron 260 
Mustardseed, a fairy, c. in Mids. -night's D. Sha. 161 
Mutability - - * She. 395, 439; Spe. 499; Wor. 378 
Mutation— a sonnet ----- Bry. 70 
Mutius, c. in Titus Andronicus - Sha. 688 

Mutual forbearance Cow. 431 

My ain kind dearie, O — a song - - - Burns 242, 308 

— annual - - * - - - - - - Hoi. 221 

— aunt Hoi. 4 

— autumn walk ------ Bry. 313 

— banks are all furnished with rags - Moore 622 

— battle-vow! — no minster walls - - - Hem. 220 

— bird has flown away ----- Bry. 236 

— birthday - - - Moore 602 ; Whi. 372 

— birthday ! O beloved mother ! Wil. 90 

— blessin' upon thy sweet wee lippie - - Burns 187 

— blessings on you, sonsie wife - - Burns 179 

— body sleeps : my heart awakes - - - Mer. 190 

— bonny lass, I work in brass - - - Burns 58 



343 



MUS3 

My 



My bonny Mary— a song - - • Burns 214 

— books - - - -••■'- - - - Lon. 414 

— bosom's lord sits lightly - Sha. 786 

— bottle is my holy pool " - - - - Burns 187 

— bounty is as boundless as the sea - - Sha. 720 

— cake is dough - - - - - - - Sha. 251 

— cathedral — a sonnet ----- Lon. 400 

— child, my child, thou leavest me ! - - Hem. 195 

— Chloris ; mark how green the groves - Burns 264 

— coachman in the moonlight there - - Low. 341 

— collier laddie — a song ----- Burns 248 

— comforts drop and melt away like snow - Her. 270 

— conscience hath a thousand - - - Sha. 589 

— creed. (Alice Cary.) ----- Fav. 279 

— curse upon the venomed stang -. - - Burns 118 

— darling's shoes (anon.) ----- Fav. 90 

— dear friend, if reading verse be your delight Cow. 407 

— dear Jockey ," Remarks on - - - Burns 297 

— dear lady — — ! I've just been sending out Moore 310 

— dear lady Bab, you'll be shocked, I'm afraid Moore 305 

— dear Redeemer and my God - - - Wes. 192 

— dearest Mary, wherefore hast thou gone — a 

fragment ------- She. 504 

— dearie, if thou die," Remarks on - - Burns 312 

— doves - - - Bro. 72 

— dream -------- Whi. 195 

— dream is of an island place - Bro. 47 

— ear is full of summer sounds - Whi. 278 

— eyes deceive me not, it must be he - - Col. 231 

— eyes make pictures when they're shut - Col. 214 

— faint spirit was sitting in the light - - She. 437 

— fair lady - - Ing. 513 

— faithfulness I cannot see - Wes. 296 

— fate cries out, and makes - Sha. 817 

— fates had destined me to rove - - Moore 89 

— father left a park to me - Ten. 105 

— father was a farmer — a song - - Burns 192 

— father's brother but no more - Sha. 814 

— father's close - - - - * - - Ros. 140 

— flocks feed not ----- Sha. 1052 

— former hopes are fled Cow. 72 

— frame hath often trembled with delight - Wor. 331 

— friend should meet somewhere hereabout - Ten. 707 

— friend, thou sorrowest for the - Bry. 201 ; Fav. 408 

— friends were poor but honest - - - Sha. 258 

— future will not copy fair my past - - Bro. 164 

— garden - Erne. 192 

— gentle Anne, whom heretofore ? Cow. 494 

— gentle harp Moore 254 

— gentle Puck, come hither - Flo. 79 



My 344 

My glass shall not persuade me — a sonnet - Sha. 1030 

— God, a verse is not a crown - - - Her. 154 

— God, how perfect are thy ways ! - - - Cow. 59 

— God, I heard this day - Her. 179 

— God, I read this day - Her. 186 

— God, I thank thee who hast made - - Pro. 162 

— God, if writings may ----- Her. 194 

— God, my God, on thee I call - - - Wes. 262 

— God, till I received thy stroke - - - Cow. 59 

— God, where is that ancient heat - - Her. 28, 306 

— goddess — an ode ------ Goe. 167 

— golden spurs now bring to me - - - Low. 108 

— good blade carves the casques of men - Ten. 106 

— good man — he's an old, old man - - Ing. 513 

— grief no mortal knows except - Goe. 407 

— gun shines in the mistv air - - - Fav. 229 

— hair is gray, but not with years - - Byron 82 

— halting muse, that dragg'st by choice along Cow. 582 

— handsome Nell — a song - Burns 189 

— harp has one unchanging theme - - Moore 526 

— Harry was a gallant gay — a song - Burns 223 

— hawk is tired of perch and hood - - Scott 158 

— head is heavy — a fragment - - - - She. 506 

— head is wild with weeping — a fragment - She. 503 

— heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains Keats 231 

— heart and I ------ Bro. 269 

— heart did heave, and there came forth - Her. 158 

— heart has thanked thee, Bowles — a sonnet Col. 91 

— heart is breaking, dear tittie ! - - Burns 225 

— heart is easy and my burden light - - Cow. 624 

— heart is sad - - - - - . - - Goe. 394 

— heart is sair — I dare na tell - - - Burns 260 

— heart is sick with longing — a sonnet - - Hood 182 

— heart is true as steel ----- Sha. 165 

— heart is wae, and unco wae - - - Burns 205 

— heart is wasted with my woe - - - Ten. 20 

— heart leaps up when I behold - - - Wor. 79 

— heart to-night runs over with its fullness Wil. 94 

— heart was ance as blithe and free — a song Burns 214 

— heart was heavy for its trust had been - Whi. 121 
- heart's in the Highlands — a song - - Burns 224 

— heart's my green-house - Flo. 327 

— heart's to me a pleasant green-house - - Flo. 327 

— Hoggie — a song ------ Burns 217 

— honored colonel, deep I feel - - - Burns 148 

— hope and heart is with thee - .- - Ten. 22 

— hope, my heaven, my trust must be - - Scott 115 

— hungry eyes, through greedy covetise - Spe. 693 

— imaginations are as foul --.-.- Sha. 828 

— Jean ! — a song ------ Burns 195 



345 My 

My Jo, Janet," Remarks on - - - Burns 316 

— journal Pro. 108 

— joy,. my life, my crown! -,.-■- Her. 269 

— Kate -------- Bro. 599 

— lady walks her morning round •• - - Whi. 412 

— lady's gown — a song ----- Burns 261 

— large kingdom for a little grave - - - Sha. 371 

— letters, all dead paper - Bro. 160 

— library was dukedom large enough - - Sha. 3 

— lids with grief were tumid yet - Cow. 574 

— life you ask of ? why, you know - Pro. 131 

— little doves have left a nest - - - Bro. 72 

— little love, do you remember - Mer. 231 

— little maiden of four years old - Fav. 440 

— little son, my Florentine - Bro. 350 

— lonely chamber next the sea - Bro. 265 

— lord complains that pope - Pope 390 

— lord, I know your noble ear - - - Burns 108 

— lord, the instructions, brought to-day Moore 507 

— lords, we heard you speak - •• - Ten. 486 

— lost William, thou in whom - She. 460 

— lost youth Lon. 219 

— love --------- Low. 5 

— love and I, the other day - Moore 170 

— love, I have no fear Low. 21 

— love is as a fever, longing still — a sonnet Sha. 1046 

— love is like to ice, and I to fire - - - Spe. 692 

— love is strengthened though more weak - Sha. 1040 

— love, — my chosen, — but not mine ! - - Mer. 197 

— love she's but a lassie yet — a song - - Burns 229 

— love was once a bonny lad - - - Burns 297 

— loved, my honored, much respected Burns 50 ; Fav. 91 

— lovely Nancy — a song - - Burns 222 

— lungs began to crow like chanticleer - - Sha. 213 

— maiden she proved false to me - - - Goe. 25 

— man's as true as steel Sha. 723 

— Mary Cow. 504 

— Mary! dear departed shade! — a song - Burns 219 

— master Bukton, whan of Christ our kin^ Cha. 595 

— merit, lord, and righteousness - -* Wes. 254 

— mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun Sha. 1044 

— mistress, where sits she ? - - - - Goe. 66 

— mother had a maid called Barbara - - Flo. 143 

— mother ! if you love me, name no more - Cow. 522 

— mother, To ------ Moore 603 

— mother's voice ! how often creeps - - Wil. 277 

— mule refreshed, and, let the truth - - Rog- 19 

— name be on the children? No - Wes. 240 

— name is Water : I have sped - - - Low. 96 

— name — my country — what are they to thee? Cow. 513 



My 

Nsenias 



846 



My namesake Whi. 215 

— Nannie, O — a song Burns 190 

— Nannie's awa— a song - Burns 233 

— native land, good-night ! - - - • - Byron 280 

— neighbor none can e'er deny - - - Goe. 31 

— neighbor White — we met to-day - - Ing. 42 

— neighbor's certain, well I see - - - Goe. 28 

— new child-sweetheart ----- Cam. 314 

— offense is rank it smells to - Sha. 831 

— old schoolmaster, To Whi. 173 

— old Welch neighbor over the way - - Whi. 375 

— only property — an epigram - Goe. 225 

— own beloved, who has lifted me - - Bro. 159 

— own character White 32 

— own land ! where freedom finds - - Flo. 57 

— peace is gone, my heart is sore - - Faust 122 

— Peggy is a young thing ... - Burns 314 

— Peggy's face — a song - Burns 207 

— pensive Sara ! thy soft cheek reclined - Col. 56 

— picture Pro. 30 

— picture gallery ------ Pro. 258 

— pipe is lit, my grog is mixed - - - Hood 371 

— playmate ------- Whi. 233 

— poet, thou canst touch on all the notes - Bro. 157 

— poverty, but not my will - Sha. 737 

— pride fell with my fortunes - - - - Sha, 208 

— psalm -------- Whi. 242 

— Kosalind, my Rosalind Ten. 479 

— Rose, Gravina, blooms anew - - - Cow. 504 

— salad days when I was green - - - Sha. 916 

— Saviour, dare I come to thee - - - Mer. 288 

— sense reviving that erewhile had drooped - Dante 19 

— senses ofttimes are oppressed - - - Goe. 23 

— sentence is for open war "--■-- Mil. 37 

— sin will find me out unless - - - Wes. 252 

— sister ! my sweet sister ! if a name - Byron 225 

— sister's sleep - - • - - - - Ros. 103 

— slight and slender jasmine-tree - - - Flo. 120 

— soger laddie is over the sea - - - Burns 336 

— son, give me thine heart -,.--- Wes. 286 

— song shall bless the lord of all - - - Cow. 68 

— soul and I ------- Whi. 92 

— soul is an enchanted boat - She. 239 

— soul is dark ------ Byron 192 

— soul is sad and much dismayed - - Cow. 77 

— soul no more is lonely Fav. 227 

— soul thirsteth for God - Cow. 86 

— soul, through my Redeemer's care - - Wes. 284 

— soul was like the sea Low. 9 

— soul was singing at a work apart - - Bro. 383 



34 < 



My 

Nseni: 



My spirit is too weak ; mortality - - - Keats 251 

— spirit like a charmed barque doth swim - She. 574 

— spouse, Nancy — a song - Burns 258 

— spouse ! in whose presence I live - - - Cow. 623 

— stock lies dead, and no increase - - Her. 143 

— study White 308 

— sweet youth now is all done - - - Mer. 238 

— theme pursuing, I relate that ere - Dante 25 

— thoughts are all in yonder town - - Whi. 384 

— thoughts arise and fade — a fragment - - She. 502 

— Tocher's the jewel — a song - - Burns 236, 336 

— tongue-tied muse in manners — a sonnet - Sha. 1038 

— trembling muse your honor does address Tho. 377 

— triumph -------- Whi. 351 

— true and honorable wife - Sha. 771 

— trust in nothing now is placed - - - Goe. 91 

— twenty-fourth year, On - Mer. 255 

— twofold book ! single in show - - - Cow. 593 

— way of life is fallen into - - - - Sha. 807 

— wayward fate I needs must plain - - Scott 380 

— wealth's a burly spear and brand - - Cam. 126 

— wife's a winsome wee thing— a song - Burns 242 

— will -------- Pro. 244 

— words and thoughts do both express - - Her. * 172 

— worthy friend, a Gordon Knott - - Low. 313 

— young lord's the lover ----- Ros. 141 
My cilia dyes her locks, 'tis said - - - Cow. 516 
Myller, Prologue of the ----- Cha. 95 

Myra, To Tho. 463 

Myriologue ; or Greek funeral chant - - Hem. 143 

Myrtle, A. (Keats.) ----- Flo. 118 

— leaf, that ill besped ----- q 1. 59 
Myself. (H. E. G. Arey.) - Flo. 361 

— and what is mine to you and yours - - Sha. 194 
Mysterious God in persons three - - - Wes. 162 

— illness, The ------- Hoi. 115 

— visitor, The ------ - Hoi. 72 

Mystery ----- Mer. 260; Whi. 389 

— lo ! betwixt the sun and moon - - - Ros. 303 

— of mysteries Ten. 15 

Mystic - - - Ten. 468 

Nadar, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 330 

Nadir, Zenith and ------ Sch. 248 

Nadowessian death-lament ... - Sch. 123 

Nae, gentle dames, though e'er sae fair - Burns 199 

— heathen name shall I prefix - - - Burns 107 

— man can tether time or tide - - - Burns 132 

Nsenia - Sch. 231 

Ngenise - - Mer. 253 



Nail t\A.k 

Wearing °*° 

Nail to the mast her holy flag - Hoi. 1 

Nam, Widow of ----- - Wil. 46 

Name, my Laura, name the whirl-compelling Sch. 22 

— unknown," The ------ Cam. 231 

— unmusical to the Volscians ears - - - Sha. 678 
Nameless grave, A — a sonnet - - - Lon. 367 
Names in Biographia Brittanica, On seeing - Cow. 51 

— of Allah - - - - - - - P. of F. 1 

— of our lady - Pro. 366 

Naming of places, Poems on - - - - Wor. 136 

Namur and Liege, Between — a sonnet - - Wor. 293 

Nancy's ghost. (Dr. Blacklock.) - - - Burns 325 

Naomi, c. in Remorse - Col. 310 

— and Ruth ------- Wes. 18 

Naples, Italy ... - R g. 137; Whi. 277 

— Ode to ------- She. 430 

— too credulous, ah ! boast no more - - Cow. 571 

— Written in, 1833 ------ Erne. 300 

— Written near - - - ■ - - - - She. 411 

Napoleon Bonaparte Ten. 477 

and the British sailor - Cam. 300 

FaUof ------- She. 397 

Years ago and that great word - - Bro. 262 

On hearing of his death - - - She. 439 

Portrait of— a sonnet - Wor. 247 

Ode to ------- Byron 197 

Napoleon's farewell Byron 261 

Napoleon III. in Italy ----- Bro. 342 

Narcissus (anon.) - - - - - - Flo. 48 

— (Cowper.) ------- Flo. 49 

— and Echo. (Milton.) ----- Flo. 47 

— Death of. (Addison.) ----- Flo. 48 

— Poesy of the ------ Flo. 46 

— The. (Gay, Keats, Landon.) - - - Flo. 51 

— to a mirror ------- Flo. 48 

— To the. (Ben Jonson.) ----- Flo. 49 
Narrow glen, The ------ Wor. 256 

— way, The ------- Cow. 91 

Naseby, Battle of ----- Mac. 155 

Natal genius, The ----- Moore 95 

Natales et Pascha concurrentes. In - - Her. 589 

Nathaniel, Sir, c. in Love's Labor's Lost - Sha. 135 

National airs ------- Moore 521 

— independence, Poems to Wor. 269 

— lyrics -------- Whi. 314 

— prejudices ------- R g. 109 

— sanitary association, For meeting of 1860 Hoi. 149 

— song -------- Ten. 474 

Native land, The Lon. 17 

Nativity, The. (Mme. Guyon.) - - - Cow. 612 



oaq Nail 

v^v Wearing 

Naturalists and transcendental philosophers Sch. 262 

Naturam non pati senium ----- Mil. 543 

Nature - - - - Erne. 193; Her. 127; Lon. 380 

— (E. Young.) - - Fav. 65 

— and life, Fragments on Erne. 278 

— and nature's laws lay hid in night - - Pope 348 

— Beauties of . (Burns.) - Fav. 195 

— Circle of ------- Sch. 259 

— ever faithful is to such a trust - - - Erne. 47 

— exerting an unwearied power - - - Cow. 146 

— hath framed strange fellows - - - Sha. 181 

— in charms is exhaustless, in beauty ever - Sch. 285 

— is fine in love, and where 'tis fine - - Sha. 837 

— Man and - Bro. 70 

— Music of. (Pierpont.) - Fav. 22 

— Prayer of - Byron 170 ; Fav. 146 

— so far as in her lies Ten. 392 

— Song of ------- Erne. 209 

— unimpaired by time. (Milton.) - - Cow. 576 

— withheld Cassandra in the skies - - Keats 256 
Nature's credentials in a peasant's face - Tay. 219 

— labels Moore 81 

— law -------- Burns 105 

— own sweet and cunning hand - - - Sha. 285 

— remorses Bro. 621 

Nauhaught, the deacon ----- Whi. 348 

Naunton, R, Letters to - - - - Her. 497, 499, 503 

Navarino, Battle of Cam. 227 

Navarre, Legend of ----- Hood 503 

Nay, dearest Anna! why so grave? - - - Col. 215 

— do not weep, my Fanny dear ! - - - Moore 146 

— if I had come back so Bro. 603 

— lady, one frown is enough - - - Wil. 297 

— smile not at my sullen brow - - Byron 288 

— smile not, lady, when I speak of witchcraft Scott 483 

— tell me not ------ Moore 238 

— tempt me not to love again - - - Moore 136 

— that's past praying for - Sha. 392 

— traveler ! rest. This lonely yew-tree stands Wor. 31 
Ne may I without blot of endless blame - Spe. 28 

Neall, Daniel - - Whi. 137 

Neapolitan, The Cow. 530 

Near a brook a boy is sitting - - - - Sch. 112 

— Amio's stream I spied — a sonnet - - Wor. 314 

— death -------- Wes. 57 

— our southwestern border - - - - Bry. 330 

— the lone pile with ivy overspread - - Col. 204 

— yonder copse where once the garden smiled Fav. 159 

Nearest friend, The P. of F. 115 

Nearing the snow-line Hoi. 248 



'Neath ozr\ 

Newton Dtn ' 

'Neath my moon what doest thou - - - Bro. 57 

— skies that winter never knew - - - Whi. 415 

— the shadow of these bushes - Goe. 183 
Nee dextra te fugit almo amoris emblema - Her. 574 
Necessity of self-abasement. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 643 
Necromancer, The ------ Hem. 403 

Needlecase and harp Wor. 150 

Needless alarm, The Cow. 460 

Ne'er ask the hour ----- Moore 261 

— have I seen the market and streets - - Goe. 289 

— talk of wisdom's gloomy schools - - Moore 535 
Neglected heart, The ----- Mer. 453 
Negligence, Proverbs against - - - - Cha. 602 
Negroes expelled from France — a sonnet - Wor. 271 

Negro's complaint, The Cow. 447 

Neidpath, Maid of - Scott 377 

Neither a borrower nor a lender be - - - Sha. 819 

— rhyme nor reason can - Sha. 218 

— this nor that — an epigram - Goe. 223 
Nelly Gray, Faithless ----.- Hood 361 

Nelsoni mors White 353 

Nemesis, c. in Manfred Byron 87 

— a sonnet - - - - - - - Goe. 218 

Nempe hucusque notos tenebricosos - - Her. 543 

Nerissa, c. in Merchant of Venice - - - Sha. 181 

Nero. (Monkes Tale.) - - - - - Cha. 468 

Nestor, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - - Sha. 622 

Nets and cages ------ Moore 532 

Neumann, c. in The Piccolomini - - - Col. 407 

Never again ------- Pro. 263 

— believe me ------ - Col. 203 

— believe me, see we the deities - - - Sch. 117 

— did sculptor's dream unfold - - - - Erne. 244 

— dry, never dry Goe. 61 

— elated when one man's oppressed - - Pope 219 

— enlivened with the liveliest ray - - Wor. 156 

— in tenderest quiet lapsed the day - - Whi. 360 

— less alone than when alone - - - Rog. 207 

— mind how the pedagogue proses - - Moore 207 

— or now — an appeal - - - - - Hoi. 251 

— set a squadron in the field - - - Sha. 879 

— shall souls like these ----- Lon. 351 

— surely, was holier man Low. 78 

— to blend our pleasure or our pride - - Wor. 186 

— was lady of Italy fairer to see in the face - Bro. 359 

— wedding, ever wooing - - - Cam. 228 
Neville, Letters to, from H. K. White. See Letters. 

— Miss, c. in She Stoops to Conquer - - Gol. 270 
New Amadis, The — a song ... - Q-oe. 21 

— amor, The — an antique - . - Goe. 272 



OKI 'Neath 

001 Newton 

New and the old. The Bry. 249 

— - are the leaves on the oaken spray - - Bry. 249 
-— church-yard — a sonnet ----- Wor. 380 

— churches — a sonnet Wor. 379 

— convert. The ------- Cow. 89 

— costume of the ministers. The - - - Moore 331 

— creation of peers ----- Moore 625 

— Eden. The Hoi. 134 

— England (anon.) Fa v. 191 

— England dialect. Notes on - - - - Low. 209 

— England legend. Extract from - - - Whi. 127 

— England society's semi-centennial - - Hoi. 136 

— England, we love thee ; no time can erase - Hoi. 136 

— Exodus. The ------ Whi. 201 

— forcers of conscience Mil. 470 

— Hampshire Whi. 59 

— Haven. Elms of Wil. 104 

— house. Spoken at opening of the - - Dry. 483 

— love, new life — a song Goe. 48 

— made honor doth forget - Sha. 334 

— moon. The Bry. 98 

— mother. A Pro. 234 

— simile. A - Gol. 131 

— Timor and the poets Ten. 484 

— wife and the old Whi. 40 

— year, forth looking out of Janus' gate - Spe. 688 

— Year. On the— a song ----- Goe. 79 

— Year. The. (Tennvson.) - - Flo. 332: Whi. 60 

— Year. The. (Willis.) Fav. 37 

— Year thought - - - - - - Cam. 240 

— Year's burden Ros. 105 

— Year's day. On a ----- Hood 607 

— Year's eve - Ten. 43 

— Year's eve. Song for ----- Brv. 234 

— Year's eve. 1850' ------ Low. 339 

— Zealand. Colonists for - Cam. 308 
Newborn death — two sonnets - Ros. 275 
Newbury. Double-headed snake of - - Whi. 228 
Newfoundland dog. On monument of - Byron 230 
Newport, Jewish cemeterv at Low. 216 
News --------- Mer. 207 

— for country cousins ----- Moore 634 

— news. news, mv gossiping friends ! - - Mer. 207 

— of battle :— news of battle ! - - - - Ayt. ' 12 
Newspaper. After reading a — a sonnet - - Wbr. 438 

— On receiving a free subscription to a - Burns 128 

— The Cra. 249 

Newstead abbey. Elegy on Byron 159 

— abbey. On leaving Byron 131 

Newton, Sir Isaac, Epitaph for - - - Pope 348 



Newton QF\<^> 

No 6 ® Z 

Newton, Sir Isaac, To memory of - Tho. 406 

— Mrs., To, on receiving oysters - - - Cow. 399 

— Rev. Mr., From a letter to - - - -Cow. 406 

To - - - - - - - Cow. 396, 434 

Next morning Troilus began to clear - - Wor. 478 

— o'er his books his eyes began to roll - - Pope 126 

— thereunto did grow a goodly tree - - Flo. 126 

— to a graver tribe we turn our view - - Cra. 359 

— to thyself 'tis all on earth - - Burns 472 

— year's spring— a song ----- Goe. 71 
Nicanor, c. in Judas Maccabseus - - - Lon. 330 

Nicholas, Grand-duke Scott 402 

Nicol, William, Letters to - Burns 375, 376, 378, 452, 475 

Night. (Southey.) - - Fav. 42; Lon. 401; Mer. 468 

— (William Habington.) ----- Flo. 436 

— adventure of Diomed and Ulysses - - Iliad 222 

— and death. (E. H. W.) - - - - Whi. 397 

— and morning were at meeting - - - Scott 395 

— and the merry man ----- Bro. 57 

— blooming cereus ------ Flo. 276 

— closed around the conqueror's way - Moore 230 

— dreams trace on memory's wall - - Erne. 242 

— how I love thy silent shades - Cow. 641 

— in Arabia. An hour ago - Wil. 201 

— in the fisherman's hut, A Mer. 273 

— is the dark stem of the lily day - - Low. 339 

— journey of a river ------ Bry. 237 

— of music ------- Moore 658 

— on the city of the Moor ! - Whi. 164 

— piece, A - - Wor. 169 

— scene in Genoa ------ Hem. 114 

— scene, The ------- Col. 156 

— song - - - - Goe. 57 

— star, Sura of the - P. of F. 87 

— thought, A - Moore 73; Wor. 420 

— thoughts — a song - Goe. 65 

— thoughts, Extract from. (Young.) - - Fav. 311 

— was again descending when my mule - Rog. 15 

— with all thine eyes look down - - - She. 576 
Nightingale and glow-worm, The - - - Cow. 391 

— Cuckoo and the - - - - - - Cha. 571 

— heard by unsatisfied heart - - - Ing. 215 

— Ode to a - Keats 231 

— Sonnet to the Mil. 471 

— Strada's Cow. 604 

— The - - - Col. 179 

— The, by G. Turnbull - Burns 542 

— To the - - Col. 50; Cow. 486; Tho. 462; Wor. 171 
Nightingales. Bianca among the - - - Bro. 596 

— warbled without - - - - - - Ten. 536 



o k o Newton 

Nightmare dream by daylight - - - - Hoi. 151 

Night's candles are burnt out - - - Sha. 730 

Nightshade, The (anon.) ----- Fi . 376 

Nile, Sonnet to the - - - - Keats 253 ; She. 406 

— Tiber and the Thames — a sonnet - - - Eos. 297 
Niloiya said to Noah, ' ' What aileth thee - Ing. 270 
Nimrod and the gnat - - - - - P.'ofF. 62 
Nianthoma, Complaint of Col. 41 
Nine sisters, beautiful in form and face - - Lon. 381 

— years have slipped like hour-glass sand - Low. 344 

— years old! The first of any - - Bro. 67; Flo. 442 
Ninetieth psalm, The — first six verses - Burns 38 
Nineveh, Burden of - - - Ros. 21 
Ninian, c. in MacDuff 's Cross - Scott 484 
Niobe. Epitaph on - - - - - - Cow. 517 

Nisus and Euryalus, Episode of - - Byron 148 

— the guardian of the portal, stood - - Byron 148 
Nith, Thoughts on banks of Wor. 253 
Nithsdale's welcome hame — a song - - Burns 239 
Nithside, In a hermitage at Burns 114 
No aimless wanderers, by the fiend unrest Whi. 147 

— answer -------- Ten. 491 

— Augustan century ----- s c h. 221 

— beast of earth, no fowl that flies - P. of F. 173 

— berserk thirst of blood had they - - Whi. 409 

— bird-song floated down the hill Fav. 316 ; Whi. 284 

— bitter tears for thee be shed - - - Hem. 330 

— breath of air to break the wave - - Byron 1 

— ceremony that to great ones - - - Sha. 74 

— charm in trophies won with ease - Moore 429 

— churchman am I, for to rail and to write Burns 195 

— cloud, no relic of the sunken day - - - Col. 179 

— cloud to dim the splendor of the day - Hem. 119 

— compunctious visitings of nature - - Sha. 791 

— creature smarts so little as a fool - - Pope 2Q6 

— daintie flowre or herbe that growes - - Spe. 141 

— door has my house ----- Goe. 67 

— every fallen child of man - Wes. 166 

— farther seek his merits to disclose - - Fav. 35 

— fate, save by the victim's fault, is low - Erne. 288 

— fear lest praise should make us proud ! - Hoi. 181 

— fetters in the Bay state ----- Whi. 63 

— fiction was it of the antique age - - Wor. 329 

— flowers grew in the vale - Flo. 39 

— hell but what he makes - - - L. of A. 130 

— hinge nor loop to hang a doubt - - - Sha. 896 

— I am that I am, and they that level - - Sha. 1042 

— in truth there's here no lack - - Goe. 222 

— lady ! lady ! keep the ring - Moore 134 

— life worth naming ever comes to good - Hoi. 105 

23 



No o x± 

Nor <^ 0i 

No longer I follow a sound - Cow. 416 

— longer mourn for me — a sonnet - - - Sha. 1036 

— longer than what time Latona's twins - Dante 342 

— longer truth, though shown.in verse, disdain Cra. 244 

— longer will I fight this conflict weary - Sch. 78 

— man knoweth his sepulcher - Bry. 36 

— medicine in the world can do thee good - Sha. 845 

— mischief worthier of our fear - - - Cow. 516 

— mor of this, for G-oddes dignite ! " - - Cha. 413 

— more -------- Ten. 482 

— more be grieved at that which thou hast 

done— a sonnet ------ Sha. 1032 

— more, no more will I resign - - - Hood 2Q2 

— more of talk where God or angel guest - Mil. 192 

— more of that, Hal Sha. 393 

— more of your guests, be they titled or not Bums 184 

— more of your titled acquaintances boast - Burns 184 

— more shall hapless Celia's ears — a song - Cow. 45 

— more : the end is sudden and abrupt - Wor. 389 

— more the summer floweret - - - - Hoi. 33 

— more these simple flowers belong - - Whi. 186 

— more, ye warblers of the wood - - Burns 143 

— morning ever seemed so long - - - Hood 588 

— mortal object did these eyes behold — a sonnet Wor. 231 

— music, thou art not — a fragment - - She. 502 

— mystic charm, no mortal art - - - Hoi. 271 

— name to bid us know Pro. 91 

— ne'er did the wave in its element steep Moore 140 

— never shall my soul forget - - - Moore 185 

— never such a draught was poured - - Hoi. 247 

— no ! go not to Lethe, neither twist Flo. 505 ; Keats 237 

— not after twenty years ----- Wes. 168 

— not if all the saints could join - - - Wes. 281 

— not more welcome ----- Moore 249 

— one is so accursed by fate - - - - Lon. 36 

— one so blind as he who will not see - - Lon. 45 

— one so deaf as he who will not hear - - Lon. 45 

— one talks more than a poet - - - - Goe. 20 

— pains like passions, no deceit like sense - Arn. 3 60 

— poor Dutch peasant winged with all his fear Dry. 520 

— popular respect will I omit - Hood 183 

— profit grows where is no - - - - Sha. 232 

— real queen exists but the womanly beauty Sch. 234 

— song, nor dance I bring from yon great city Burns 124 

— sooner looked but they loved - - - Sha. 225 

— sooner was the flowery crown - - Moore 471 

— sorrow peculiar to the sufferer - - - Cow. 608 

— sound, no face of joy to welcome us! - - Col. 310 

— sound of wheels or hoof -beat breaks - Lon. 359 

— specious splendor of this stone Byron 154; Fav. 270 



355 



Wo 
Nor 



No Stewart art thou, Galloway - - - Burns 182 

— stir in the air, no stir in the sea - - - Fav. 395 

— strength of nature can suffice - - - Cow. 87 

— sun — no moon ! Hood 316 

— tears dim the sweet look that nature wears Lon. 9 

— the heart that has truly loved never forgets Moore 226 

— there can be no reprieve - Wes. 298 

— they cry, it cannot be ! - - - - - Wes. 288 

— thou malicious fiend Wes. 280 

— time, thou shalt not boast — a sonnet - - Sha. 1043 

— 'tis not so deep as a well - Sha. 726 

— 'tis not the region where love's to be found Moore 587 

— 'tis slander whose edge is sharper - - Sha. 958 

— trumpet-blast profaned ----- Bry. 343 

— virtue like necessity ----- Sha. 361 

— wonder, Mary, that thy story - - Moore 591 

— words suffice the secret soul to show - Byron 48 
Noble be man, helpful and good ! - - - Goe. 181 

— Moringer, The ------ Scott 368 

— nature, The. (Ben Jonson.) - - - Fav. 422 
Nobly in truth, ye are clothed - - - Sch. 223 
Nocturnal reverie. (Countess of Winchelsea.) Flo. 493 

Noel (in French) Lon. 323 

Noisy polemic, Epitaph on a - - - Burns 186 

Nomades, The - Low. 345 

Non mea fert aetas, ut te veterane, lacessam - Her. 559 

— quia Pontificum sunt olim afflata veneno Her. 565 

— resistance Hoi. 103 

Nondum blanda tuas leges, Amathusia noram Mil. 527 

None are so desolate but something dear Byron 293 

— ever shared the social feast - - - Cow. 602 

Nonne prestes tale, The Cha. 478 

Nonnus, Paraphrases on - Bro. 173 

Nonsense ------- Moore 80 

Noon- - Bry. 205 

Noonday -------- Ing. 515 

Noon's fervid hour perchance six thousand Dante 346 

Noontide lyric, A Hoi. 84 

Nor aught so good but strained - - - Sha. 721 

— can I not believe — a sonnet - - - - W or. 419 

— cast one longing, lingering, look behind - Fav. 33 

— cold, nor stern my soul ! yet I detest - - Col. 159 

— do not saw the air too much - - - Sha. 827 

— fame I slight, nor for her favors call - - Pope 465 

— gladden gods, being good, with blood L. of A. 94 

— grandeur hear with a disdainful smile - Fav. 31 

— lay upon the brow of innocent bound L. of A. 94 

— oils of balmy scent produce - - - - Cow. 520 

— marry for nothing but only love - - Scott 449 

— scorn the aid which fancy - Wor. 357 



Nor oxa 

Not C)0D 

Nor happiness, nor majesty, nor fame - - She. 439 

— shall the eternal roll of praise reject - Wor. 373 

— time nor place did then - Sha. 792 

— travels my meandering eye - - - Col. 53 

— wants the cause the panic-striking aid - Wor. 356 

— would I praise her but in perfect love - Wor. 530 

— you, ye proud, impute to these the fault - Fav. 31 
Nora's vow ------- Scott 401 

Norembega - - - - - - - - Whi. 347 

Norfolk, Duke of (Mowbray), c. in Richard ii. Sha. 356 

c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - - - - Sha. 526 

c. in Eichard iii. ----- Sha. 556 

c. in Henry viii. ----- Sha. 592 

Norman baron, The ----- Lon. 80 

— bishop of London, c. in Harold - - - Ten. 615 

— boy, The ------ - Wor. 89 

— conquest, The — a sonnet - Wor. 360 

— horse-shoe, The ------ Scott 377 

— the forester's song ------ Scott 419 

Noma's incantations ----- Scott 437 

— song. (Pirate.) ------ Scott 434 

Norris, Sir John— a sonnet - - - - Spe. 28 

Norsemen, The - - - - - - - Whi. 27 

North, Christopher, To - - - - - Ten. 482 

— and south ------- Bro. 624 

— cape, Discoverer of the - Lon. 222 

— sea, The - - - - - - - - Mer. 272 

— star, Hymn to - Bry. . 74 

Northcot, William, Inscription to - - - Cow. 431 

Northern cobbler, The Ten. 692 

— farmer (old style) - Ten, 381 

— farmer (new style) ----- Ten. 441 

— legend, A ------- Bry. 155 

— lights. See Aurora Borealis. 

Northleigh, Sonnet to ----- Dry. 267 

Northumberland, Earl of, c. in Richard ii. - Sha. 356 

(Henry Percy), c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - Sha. 382 

c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - - - Sha. 526 

(Siward), c. in Macbeth - - - - Sha. 788 

Sonnet to Spe. 26 

— Lady, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 409 
Northward over Drontheim - Lon. 258 
Norton, Charles Eliot, To Low. 329 

— Mrs. E. C. Bingen on the Rhine - - Fav. 371 

Wealth is not happiness - - - - Fav. 262 

Nortons, Fate of the Wor. 334 

Not a breath of air - - - - - - Wor. 169 

— a drum was heard, not a funeral note - Fav. 35 

— a flower can be found in the fields - - Cow. 606 

— a sound is heard in the convent - - Pro. 331 



35' 



Nor 
Not 



Not Aladdin magian ----- Keats 269 

— all the miracles of love - - - - Wes. 245 

— all the water in the rough rude sea - - Sha. 369 

— always as the whirlwind's - Whi. 92 

— always should the tear's ambrosial dew - Col. 94 

— always unimpeded can I pray - - - Low. 338 

— as a poor requital of the joy - - - Whi. 108 

— as all other women are - Low. 5 

— as the conqueror comes Hem. 416 

— born under a rhyming planet - - - Sha. 132 

— by one measure may'st thou note our love Eos. 242 

— chaos-like together crushed and bruised - Pope 97 

— charity we ask ------ Hoi. 141 

— dead, but gone before ----- Rog. 207 

— envying Latian shades — a sonnet - - - Wor. 327 

— far advanced was morning day - - Scott 98 

— far from hence. From yonder pointed hill She. 464 

— fashioned out of gold like Hera's throne - Lon. 341 

— faster yonder rowers' might - - - - Scott 117 

— for a favorite form or name - Wes. 185 

— for the myrtle, and not for the vine - - Hem. 384 

— from his head was woman took - - Wes. 231 

— from the sands or cloven rocks - - - Bry. 126 

— from the stars do I my judgment pluck — a 

sonnet ----*-- Sha. 1030 

— half worthy the like of you -"-.-'. Fav. 402 

— here ! the white north has thy bones - - Ten. 729 

— hurled precipitous from steep to steep — a 

sonnet ------- Wor. 333 

— I myself know all my love for thee - - Eos. 243 

— if thy work be worth a date-stone's skin P. of F. 78 

— in rich furniture or fine array - - - Her. 134 

— in the crowd of masqueraders - - - Sch. 301 

— in the lucid intervals of life - Wor. 391 

— in the mines beyond the western main - Wor. 411 

— in the solitude ------ Bry. 129 

— in the world of light alone - Hoi. 143 

— in their houses stand the stars - - - Erne. 249 

— in those climes where I have late been Byron 277 

— in thy body is thy life at all - - - Eos. 244 

— in vain I waited ------ l n g. 435 

— like his great compeers, indignantly - Wor. 294 

— long ago the writer of these lines - - Poe 74 

— love, not war, nor the tumultuous swell - Wor. 235 

— many months have now been dreamed away Moore 199 

— marble, nor the gilded monuments — a sonnet Sha. 1034 

— 'mid the world's vain objects that enslave Wor. 277 

— mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul - Sha. 1041 

— occasion makes the thief - Goe. 372 

— on the whirlwind's wings He flies - - -Wes. 233 



Not OKO 

Now ODO 

Not one to throw at a dog - Sha. 209 

— only around our infancy - Low. 107 

— sedentary all : there are who roam - - Wor. 359 

— seldom clad in radiant vest - Wor. 469 

— so sick, my lord, as - Sha. 807 

— so that pair whose youthful spirits — a somiet Wor. 329 

— Stanhope ! with the patriot's doubtful name Col. 97 

— stepping o'er the bounds - Sha. 733 

— that I loved Caesar less ----- Sha. 777 

— that the earth is changing, O my God - Eos. 161 

— the whole warbling grove in concert - - Wor. 244 

— through an all-suspecting fear - - - Wes. 295 

— to myself alone (anon.) ----- Flo. 395 

— to myself this breath of vesper song - Hoi. 315 

— to speak it profanely ----- Sha. 827 

— to the clouds, not to the cliff - - - Wor. 404 

— to the object specially designed — a sonnet - Wor. 443 

— twice a twelvemonth you appear in print Pope 319 

— unfamiliar to mine ear - White 264 

— unto us who did but seek - Whi. 357 

— utterly unworthy to endure - Wor. 367 

— vainly did old poets tell - Whi. 132 

— where the chimes of the sabbath-bell - - Fav. 268 

— with blinded eyesight poring over - - Ten. 93 

— with the anguish of hearts that are break- 

ing ------- Hoi. 274 

— without envy wealth at times must look Whi. 417 

— without fire can any workman mold - - Lon. 392 

— without heavy grief of heart did He - Wor. 488 

— without thy direction ----- Wes. 122 

— works - - - Cow. 93 

— yet -------- Bry. 262 

— yet mature, yet matchless - - - Sha. 645 

— yet so old but she may learn - - - Sha. 194 
Note to title-page of Biglow Papers - - Low. 160 
Notes to Italy - Eog. 171 

— to Light of Asia ------ Arn. 185 

— to Pearls of the Faith. (Arnold.) - P. of F. 191 

— to Pleasures of Memory - - - Pog. 268, 292 

— to poems ------ Hoi. 321 ; Lon. 405 

— to second part of Faust - Faust 407 
Nothing becomes him ill that he would well - Sha. 139 

— can touch him further - Sha. 798 

— can we call our own but death - - - Sha. 370 

— comes amiss, so money - Sha. 234 

— emboldens sin so much as mercy - - - Sha. 752 

— extenuate, nor set down aught - - - Sha. 910 

— ill can dwell ------- Sha. 6 

— in his life became him like - - - Sha. ^90 

— is but what is not Sha. 790 



359 



Not 

Now 



Nothing is our own : we hold our pleasures - Pro. 319 

— of him that doth fade ----- Sha. 5 

— resting in its own completeness - Fav. 407 ; Pro. 114 
■ — so true as what you once let fall - - Pope 231 

— stirs the sunny silence ----- Pro. 299 

— that is shall perish utterly - Lon. 415 

— that keeps thought out is safe - - - Low. 398 

— the greatest artist can conceive - - Lon. 392 

— will come of nothing ----- Sha. 848 

— will die Ten. 466 

Notice sent one that house was marked - - Wes. 81 

Nought is for man so important - - - Sch. 265 

— more accursed in war 1 know - Goe. 93 

— shall make us rue Sha. 355 

— under heaven so strongly doth allure - - Spe. 398 
Nourishment which is called supper - - Sha. 137 
Novel, The ------- - Mer. 217 

Novella, a young Bolognese - Moore 577 

November - - Bry. 70; Fav. 125; Flo. 270; Spe. 558 

— song -------- Goe. 43 

— the third, 1861 - - - - - - Bry. 2Q6 

November's hail cloud drifts away - - Scott 420 

— sky is chill and drear ----- Scott 45 
Now --------- Pro. 62 

— all men beside seem to me like shadows - Fav. 402 

— as the time wore by to our lady's day - Mer. 434 

— bank and brae are claithed in green - Burns 273 

— Biorn, the son of Heriulf - Low. 354 

— by a secret pathway we proceed - - Dante 32 

— by the blessed Paphian queen - - - Hoi. 4 

— by the verdure on thy thousand hills - - Bro. 88 

— by two-hearted Janus - Sha. 181 

— came I where the water's din was heard Dante 53 

— came still evening on - - - - - Fav. 27 

— Chatto, you're a dreary place - - - Tho. 402 

— departs day's garish light - - - - Flo. 276 

— Europe's balanced, neither side - - - Pope 397 

— fair Aurora lifts her golden ray - - Odys. 106 

— folds the lily all her sweetness up - - Flo. 162 

— from all king Olaf s farms - - - Lon. 249 

— from the flnish'd games the Grecian band - Iliad 476 

— gentle reader, is our journey ended - Goe. 412 

— give us lands where olives grow - - - Bro. 624 

— glory to the lord of hosts, from whom all Mac. 136 

— good digestion wait on appetite - - - Sha. 799 

— had I left those spirits and pursued - Dante 135 

— had Minerva reached those ample plains Odys. 211 

— had the loophole of that dungeon - - She. 576 

— had the sun to that horizon reached - Dante 124 

— haply down yon gay green shaw - - Burns 282 



£ ow 360 

Now health forsakes that angel face - - Burns 177 

— hearken, ye who take delight * - - - . Sch. 54 

— heaven forsakes the fight : the immortals Iliad 254 

— heaven in all her glory shone - - - Mil. 170 

— here and there about the horrid field. 

(Bloomfield.) ----- White 450 

— I leave this cottage lowly - - - - G-oe. 38 

— in her green mantle blithe nature arrays Burns 233 

— in his word, sole, ruminating - - " - Dante 303 

— in swift fight they pass the trench profound Iliad 312 

— infidel, I have you on the hip - - - Sha. 200 

— is done thy long day's work - Ten. 19 

— is the winter of our discontent - - - Sha. 556 

— Kennedy, if foot or horse - - - Burns 163, 351 

— joy and thanks forever more - - - Whi. 73 

— let the warrior ----- Moore 651 

— men of the north ! will you join in the strife Hoi. 219 

— morn her rosy steps in the eastern clime - Mil. 110 

— morning from her orient chamber came Keats 230 

— nature deeds the flowery lea - - Burns 266 

— nature hangs her mantle green - - Burns 135 

— Neptune's sullen month appears - - Moore 57 

— night descending, the proud scene was o'er Pope 125 

— o'er the one half -world nature seems dead - Sha. 793 

— our white sail flutters down - - - Mer. 463 

— pleasing sleep had sealed each mortal eye - Iliad 70 

— reddening from the dawn, the morning ray Odys. 21 

— Robin lies in his last lair - - - Burns 38 

— rosy May conies in wi' flowers - - - Burns 256 

— slain is king Amulius ----- Mac. 125 

— sleeps the crimson petal, now the white Ten. 173 

— smiling friends and shipmates all - - Hoi. 2Q2 

— spring has clad the grove in green — a song Burns 286 

— spurs the lated traveler ----- Sha. 798 

— storming fury rose, and clamor - - Mil. 139 

— that all hearts are glad — a sonnet - - Wor. 284 

— that is after my own heart" - - - Lon. 311 

— that the farewell tear is dried - - - Wor. 299 

— the bright morning star - Mil. 418 

— the fair consort of Tithonus old - - Dante 149 

— the gray granite starting - Rog. 24 

— the king drinks to Hamlet - Sha. 845 

— the last day of many days - - - She. 445 

— the loud Crye is up and harke! - - -Hood 540 

— the lucid tears of May - Flo. 426 

— the star of day is high - Moore 32 

— the vapor hot and damp - Moore 182 

— there was made, fast by the towris wall - Ayt. 144 

— to a maturer audience ... - Wor. 92 

— to the shores we bend, a mournful train - Odys. 152 



361 g ow 

Now turning from the wintry signs, the sun Dry. 403 

— upward rose the flame and stilled - Dante 92 

— was the day departing, and the air - - Dante 4 

— was the hour that wakens fond desire Dante 146 

— was the sun so stationed, as when first - Dante 214 

— we are tired of boisterous joy - - - Wor. 261 

— we had left the angel who had turned - Dante 196 

— welcome night ! thou night so long expected Spe. 649 

— westlin winds and slaughtering guns - Burns 194 

— when the primrose makes a splendid show Wor. 452 

— while our soldiers are fighting our battles Hoi. 157 

— with a general peace the world was blest - Dry. 29 

— would I give a thousand furlongs - - Sha. 2 
Nowhere such a devious stream - - - Lon. 363 
Now's the day, and now's the hour - - Burns 257 
Nubian girl, Song of the - Moore 670 
Number one - - - - - - - Hood 352 

Numbers. On passages in book of Wes. 170, 172, 174. 250, 353 

Nun of Nidaros, The ----- Lon. 2(52 

— The. (Italy.) ------- Eog. US 

Nunc mea Pierios cupiam per pectora fontes Mil. 546 

— plaudite ! " the student cried - - - Lon. 291 
Nunnery — a sonnet - - - - - Wor. 408 
Nun's aspiration, The - -Erne. 217 

— fret not at their convent's narrow — a sonnet Wor. 226 

— well, Brigham— a sonnet - Wor. 398 
Nuptial song. See also Epithalamium - Tho. 459 
Nuremberg -------- Lon. 79 

Nurse of an ailing world, beloved night - Mer. 181 

— of Juliet, c. in Eomeo and Juliet - - - Sha. 712 
Nutting -------- Wor. 170 

Nux postccenatica - - - - - - Hoi. 36 

Nym, c. in Henry v. - - - - - Sha. 439 

— c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - - - Sha. 42 
Nymph in thy orisons be all - - - - Sha. 826 
Nymphs and shepherds dance no more - - Mil. 432 

O a dainty plant is the ivy green - - - Flo. 178 

— a pistol or a knife ! - - - - - - Hood 533 

— a' ye pious godly frocks - - - - Burns 42 

— Absalom, my son ! - Lon. 395 

— Abyssinian tree ------ Moore 670 

— all-atoning Lamb Wes. 201 

— all ye who pass by Her. 107 

— an ye were dead, guid man ! - - Burns 57 

— Antioch, my Antioch, my city ! - - Lon. 324 

— artist, range not over-wide - - - - Mer. 421 

— Ary Scheffer! when beneath thine eye - Whi. 244 

— ask not, hope thou not too much - - Hem. 347 

— ay my wife she dang me — a song - - Burns 291 



O, ay ! the monks, the monks, they did the - Scott 428 

— Bacchus, what a world of toil - - - She. 523 

— banquet not ------ Moore 2QQ 

— bards of old ! what sorrows have ye sung Hood 55 

— base Hungarian wight ----- Sha. 45 

— be thou blest with all that heaven - ■ - Pope 380 

— beauty, passing beauty I ----- - Ten. 477 

— bella mano, che ti lavi e piaci - - - Ros. 305 

— bird that used to press. (Spanish Gypsy.) Eliot 245 

— blackbird ! sing me something well - - Ten. 54 

— blame not the bard -.-•-- Moore 227 

— blaw, ye westlin winds, blaw saft - - Burns 211 

— blessed be the Rhine !----- Scott 578 

— blessed body, whither art thou thrown? - Her. 122 

— blessed things are children - Fav. 321 

— blest with temper, whose unclouded ray Pope 238 

— blithe new-comer ! I have heard - - Wor. 168 

— bold and true ------ Scott 455 

— bonny was yon rosy brier— a song - Burns 284 

— book ! infinite sweetness ! let my heart - Her. 141 

— breathe not his name - Moore 215 

— Brignall banks are wild - Scott 199 

— bring me one sweet orange bough - - Flo. 128 

— Britain! dear isle, when the annals of story Mac. 149 

— Caesar, we who are about to die - - - Lon. 354 

— Caledonia ! stern and wild - - - Scott 35 

— call back yesterday, bid time - - - Sha. 369 

— call it by some better name - - - Moore 656 

— call not me to justify the wrong — a sonnet Sha. 1045 

— cam ye here the fight to shun - - - Burns 223 

— can ye labor lea — a song - - - Burns 229 

— Chatterton ! how very sad thy fate - - Keats 250 

— cherub, content at thy moss-covered shrine Cam. 16 

— Christ of God ! whose life and death - Whi. 392 

— colder than the wind that freezes - Moore 450 

— come, dear Barney Isaacs, come - - Hood 469 

— come to me when daylight sets - - Moore 524 

— condescend, dear charming. (Turnbull.) Burns 541 

— conscious heart that in the lone paths - Wil. 34 

— constancy, be strong upon my side - - Sha. 773 

— constellations of the early night - - - Bry. 265 

— corn-rigs and rye-rigs _■-.-_- Burns 314 

— could I draw, my friend, my genuine - - Tho. 428 

— could I give thee India's wealth - - Burns 180 

— could I hope the wise and pure - - - Bry. 39 

— could I worship aught beneath the skies Cow. 190 

— could Le Sage's demon's gift - - Byron 139 

— country marvel of the earth ! - - - Bry. 262 

— coward conscience, how dost thou afflict - Sha. 589 

— cruel heart ! ere these posthumous papers Hood 518 



363 



O. cuckoo ! shall I call thee bird - - - Wor. 168 

— curfew of the setting sun ! O bells of Lynn Lon. 320 

— curse of marriage that we can call - - Sha. 895 

— darling room - Ten. 482 

— day and night, but this is Sha. 819 

— day most calm, most bright - - - Her. 160 

— days of youth ------ Moore 530 

— dearer far than light and life - - - Wor. 107 

— dearly loved! And worthy of our loved - Whi. 136 

— death hadst thou but spared his life - Burns 186 

— death, the poor man's dearest friend - Burns 50 

— death ! thou tyrant fell and bloody - - Burns 128 

— deem not they are blessed alone - - - Bry. 35 

— Dick ! you may talk of your writing - Moore 488 

— did those eyes instead of fire - - Byron 141 

— did you not hear a voice of death? - - Moore 99 

— do not use me --.... Her. 169 

— doubt me not ------ Moore 246 

— dread was the time and more dreadful - Scott 387 

— dreadful justice, what a fright and terror Her. 238 

— dreary life ! we cry, O dreary life - - Bro. 87 

— dwarfed and wronged and stained with ill Whi. 374 

— dwellers in the stately towns - - - Whi. 406 

— dwellers in the valley -land - Low. 79 

— Edredhi, forbear to-night .... Lon. 293 

— enter not yon shadowy cave - - - Hem. 130 

— enter old minstrel, thou time-honored - Goe. 102 

— even-handed nature ! we confess - - Hoi. 259 

— ever thus from childhood's hour - - Moore 430 

— factious viper ! whose envenomed tooth Byron 155 

— fading honors of the dead - Scott 13 

— fair and stately maid, whose eyes - - Erne. 87 

— fair as heaven and chaste as light - Moore 188 

— fair ! O purest ! - - - - . - - Moore 346 

— fairest flower ! no sooner blown - - - Mil. 400 

— fairest of creation, last and best - - Mil. 215 

— fairest of the rural maids - Bry. 82 

— falsely they accuse me - Flo. 180 

— fancy, if thou flyest, come back anon - Ing. 437 

— Father, gracious was that word - - Mil. 67 

— father, let us hence — for hark - - - Bry. 179 

— Father, O supreme of heavenly thrones - Mil. 152 

— father, what a hell of witchcraft lies - - Sha. 1049 

— fear not in a world like this - - - Lon. 4 

— fickle fortune, O — a song - - - Burns 201 

— flower of all that springs from gentle blood Wor. 488 

— fond anxiety of mortal men ! - - Dante 278 

— fond attempt to give a deathless lot - Cow. 51 

— for a blast of that dread horn - - - Scott 104 
^- for a closer walk with God - - - Cow. 52 



o 364 

O, for a dirge ! ------ - Wor. 494 

— for a glance of that gay muse's eye - - Scott 406 

— for a heart to praise my God - - - Wes. 365 

— for a kindling touch from that pure flame Wor. 286 

— for a knight like Bayard _-_.-- Whi. 193 

— for a lodge in some vast wilderness - Cow. 265 

— for a muse of fire • Sha. 439 

— for a tongue to curse the slave - - - Moore 440 

— for ane-and-twenty, Tarn ! — a song - Burns 238 

— for my sake do you with fortune chide — 

a sonnet ------- Sha. 1041 

— for one hour of youthful joy ! - - - Hoi. 210 

— for that warning voice, which he that saw Mil. 83 

— for the coming of that glorious time - Wor. 701 

— for the help of angels to complete - - Wor. 294 

— for the swords of former time ! - - - Moore 261 

— for the voice of that wild horn - Scott 414 

— for thy history now ! - - - - - Wil. 268 

— for thy wings, thou dove ! - Hem. 368 

— forget not the hour, when through forest Hem. 333 

— fountain ever fair and bright - - - Mer. 324 

— fragrant dwellers of the lea - - - Flo. 27 

— friend ! forever loved, forever dear ! - Byron 131 

— friend ! I know not which way I must look Wor. 272 

— friendly to the best pursuits of man - - Cow. 290 

— friends ! with whom my feet have trod - Whi. 318 

— from what power hast thou this powerful 

— a sonnet ------ Sha. 1046 

— Galloway Tarn cam here to woo - - Burns 337 

— gate, how earnest thou here? - - - Pope 389 

— gentle Romeo, if thou dost love - - - Sha. 720 

— gentle one, thy birthday sun should rise Bry. 231 

— gentle sleep ! do they belong to thee - - Wor. 228 

— gie my love brose, brose - Burns 291 

— - gift divine of quiet sequestration ! - - Wor. 497 

— gift of God! O perfect day - - - Lon. 227 

— gin my love were yon red rose - - Burns 530 

— give me back the days when loose and free Lon. 392 

— give me but my garden and my song - Byron 242 

— give me music - White 368 

— glad triumphant bough ----- Flo. 152 

— glorious spirits, who, after all your bands Her. 163 

— go not yet, my love ! Ten. 467 

— God ! in danger's darkest hour - - - Hoi. 253 

— God, it is a fearful thing - - - Byron 84 

— God ! my God ! have mercy now - - Ten. 462 

— God of battles ! steel my soul - - - Sha. 457 

— God, whose favorable eye - - - - Cow. 89 

— golden-tongued romance with serene lute - Keats 253 

— good old man, how well in thee - - Sha. 211 



365 o 

O, Goudie, terror of the Whigs - - Burns 155 

— grant an honest fame or grant me none - Pope 287 

— greenly and fair in the lands of the sun - Whi. 126 

— Gripe, Gripe, in setate -.-■-_ Mac. 212 

— guid ale comes — a song - Burns 276 

— had each Scot of ancient times- - - Burns 186 

— had I leisure to sigh and mourn - - Moore 103 

— had my fate been joined with thine -. Byron 172 

— had the malt thy strength of mind - Burns 184 

— had we some bright little isle of our own Moore 245 

— haggard queen ! to Athens dost thou guide Cam. 129 

— Hamlet, what a falling off - - • - Sha. 817 

— happiness ! our being's end and aim ! - - Pope 210 

— happy Gladys! I rejoice with her - - Ing. 366 

— happy shades ! to me unblest - - - Cow. 438 

— happy time! Art's early days ! * - - Hood 378 

— happy time of youthful lovers (thus - Wor. 115, 568 

— haste and leave this sacred isle - - Moore 219 

— hateful harm, condicioun of povert - - Cha. 151 

— have you seen the Stratton flood - - Eos. 91 

— heard ye yon pibroch sound sad in the gale Cam. 152 

— Hector, gone, gone, gone!- - - - Ros. 160 

— hemlock tree ! uoav faithful are thy branches Lon. 92 

— holy Father ! — just and true - - - Whi. 55 

— hone a rie ------- Scott 342 

— how a word like the forced drop - - Wil. 61 

— how can I be blithe — a song - - - Burns 236 

— how could Fancy crown with thee - - Hem. 374 

— how full of briers is this working-day world Sha. 209 

— how hard it is to find ----- Cam. 192 

— how I faint when I of you do write — a sonnet Sha. 1037 

— how I love thee, how I dote on thee - Sha. 174 

— how I love thy holy word - Cow. 75 

— how infinite, how unspeakably great - Sch. 254 

— how many new foes against truth - - Sch. 259 

— how much more doth beauty— a sonnet - Sha. 1034 

— how shall I unskillfu' try - - - Burns 231 

— how sore a thing and grievous - - - Wes. 312 

— how this spring of love resembleth - - Sha. 24 

— how thy worth with manners may I sing 

—a sonnet - - - - - - - Sha. 1033 

— human love ! thou spirit - - - - Poe 156 

— human race! Is this, then, all thy gain? - Eliot 117 

— hush thee, my babie, thy sire was a knight Scott 398 

— I am come to the countrie - - - Burns 275 

— I could play the woman - Sha. 806 

— I did love her dearly ----- Hoi. 80 

— I do love thee, meek simplicity - - Col. 100 

— I have lost my reputation - - - - Sha. 890 

— I have passed a miserable night - - Sha. 563 



366 



O, I see the crescent promise - Ten. 93 

— I would tell you more but I am tired - Ing. 259 

— Iago, the pity of it - Sha. 900 

— if the selfish knew how much - - - Kog. 344 

— if there is one law above the rest - - WH. 320 

— if there were not better hopes than these Wil. 200 

— if your tears are given to care - - Moore 101 

— it is excellent to have a giant's strength Sha. 74 

— it is pleasant with a heart at ease - - Col. 222 

— Jehovah, our lord, how wondrous great - Mil. 490 

— Jephthah, judge of Israel, what a treasure Sha. 823 

— joy ! that in our embers - Wor. 500 

— judgment, thou art fled - Sha. 777 

— Kate ! my dear partner, through joy - Hood 393 

— ken ye what Meg o'.the mill - - Burns 252, 277 

— Kenmure's on and awa— a song - - Burns 248 

— king of grief! (a title strange, yet true - Her. 116 

— lady fair !--.----- Moore 651 

— lady fair, these silks of mine are beautiful Whi. 91 

— lady Flora, let me speak - Ten. 101 

— lady, leave thy silken thread - - - Hood 175 

— lady Mary Ann ----- Burns 247 

— lady, twine no wreath for me - Flo. 189 ; Scott 214 

— lady ! when I left the shore - Byron 233 

— land of my fathers and mine - - - Byron 236 

— land of promise ! from what Pisgah's height Low. 65 

— lassie art thou sleeping yet — a song - - Burns 279 

— last and best of Scots Dry. 300 

— lay thy loof in mine, lass — a song - - Burns 262 

— leave novels, ye Mauchline bells ! - Burns 39 

— leave this barren spot to me ! - - - Cam. 220 

— leave your hand where it lies - - - Eos. 287 

— leeze me on my spinning-wheel - - Burns 238 

— lest the world should tax you— a sonnet - Sha. 1036 

— let the solid ground ----- Ten. 227 

— let the soul her slumbers break - Lon. 11 

— life ! how pleasant in thy morning - - Burns 162 

— life ! I breathe thee in the breeze - - - Bry. 174 

— life without thy checkered scene - - Wor. 296 

— listen, listen, ladies gay ! - - - - Scott 39 

— litde feet ! that such long years - - Lon. 228 

— lives there now so cold a maid - - - Scott 259 

— living will that shall endure - - - Ten. 216 

— Logan, sweetly didst thou glide - - Burns 253 

— London is the place for all - - - - Hood 582 

— lonely bay of Trinity - - Whi. 309 

— Lord, another day has flown - - White 356 

— Lord, I will praise thee - Cow. 57 

— Lord, incline thy gracious ear - - - Wes. 215 

— Lord, methought what pain it was to die Sha. 564 



367 



O, Lord, my best desire fulfill - Cow. 80 

— Lord, rny God, in mercy turn - - - White 358 

— Lord of all compassionate control - - Eos. 231 

— Lord of hosts ! almighty king ! - - - Hoi. 155 

— Lord, our Lord ! how wondrously " - - Wor. 470 

— Lord, oure Lord, thy name how mervelous Cha. 400 

— Lord, when hunger pinches sore - - Burns 181 

— Lord ! who seest from yon starry height Lon. 17 

— lost too soon ! ------ White 224 

— lost ! forever lost ! — no more - - - Moore 177 

— love be moderate : allay thine ecstasy - Sha. 193 

— love divine, how sweet thou art ! - - Wes. 324 

— love divine, that stooped to share - - Hoi. 177 

— love, I languish at thy stay - - - Wes. 323 

— love ! in such a wilderness as this - - Cam. 94 

— love, love, love ! O withering might ! - Ten. 30 

— love, of pure and heavenly birth ! - - Cow. 619 

— love the lamp (my mistress said) - - Moore 164 

— love! what art thou, love? - - - -Hood 326 

— love, what hours were thine and mine - Ten. 249 

— loved ! but not enough — though dearer far Cow. 628 

— lovely hand, that thy sweet self doth lave Eos. 305 

— lovely Polly Stewart! - Burns 260 

— lovely river of Yvette ! Lon. 376 

— lovely voices of the sky ... - Hem. 428 

— lovers 1 eyes are sharp to see - - - Scott 378 

— low shone the sun on the fair lake of Tors - Scott 376 

— loyal to the loyal in thyself - - - Ten. 533 

— luve will venture in — a song - - Burns 240 

— Madgeburg the town ! Goe. 77 

— maid of Isla, from the cliff - Scott 440 

— maiden, fresher than the first green leaf Ten. 470 

— maiden! heir of kings ----- Bro. 112 

— Mally's meek, Mally's sweet — a song - Burns 262 

— man may bear with suffering : his heart - Wil. 8 

— man ! what hath beguiled - - - P. of F. 93 

— many a shaft at random sent - - - Scott 290 

— Marianne ! now for thee - Byron 194 

— Mary, at thy window be Burns 193 

— Mary dear, that you were here ! - - She. 503 

— Mary, go and call the cattle home - - Fav. 411 

— may I join the choir invisible - - - Eliot 139 

— may I never dare receive - Wes. 295 

— may I never take the praise - - - Wes. 299 

— May, thy morn was ne'er sae sweet - Burns 233 

— me, my pleasant rambles by the lake - Ten. 75 

— me, what eyes hath love put in my head - Sha. 1046 

— meikle do I rue, fause love - - - Burns 289 

— meikle thinks my luve o 1 my beauty - Burns 236 

— melon-scented lily ! Flo. 166 



3*58 



O, memory, how coldly - Moore 665 

— memory ! thou fond deceiver - - - Gol. 139 

— men, of dry clay molded, as the potter P. of F. 156 

— merry hae I been — a song - Burns 227 

— might he live before thee - Wes. 121 

— might I kiss those eyes of fire - - - Byron 133 

— might the love of Jesus ----- Wes. 321 

— mighty mind — a fragment - - - She. 503 

— mighty mother, hearken ! for thy foes - Pro. 390 

— mighty mouth 'd inventor of harmonies - Ten. 395 

— mirk, mirk is the midnight hour - Burns 250 

— misery, must I lose that too? - - - Moore 430 

— monstrous ! but one half -penny worth - - Sha. 395 

— moonlight deep and tender - - - Low. 19 

— mortal man, who livest here by toil - - Tho. 319 

— mortis longseva fames venterque perennis ! Her. 582 

— most delightful hour by man - - - Cow. 443 

— most lame and impotent conclusion ! - Sha. 887 

— mother earth ! upon thy lap - Whi. 104 

— mother of a mighty race - - - - Bry. 214 

— mother state ! — the winds of March - - Whi. 381 

— mount and go ----- - Burns 227 

— mountain stream ! — a sonnet - - - Wor. 330 

— musa gressum quae volens trahis claudum Her. 549 

— my chief good Her. 120 

— my condescending Lord - Wes. 43 

— my heart, my heart is sick a- wishing - - Ing. 31 

— my lamented Talbot ! while with thee - Tho. 198 

— my lost beauty ! — hast thou folded quite - Hoi. 163 

— my luve's like a red, red rose - - - Burns 259 

— my prophetic soul ! my uncle ! - - - Sha. 817 

— my Theresa dear ! Goe. 23 

— myriads of immortal spirits ! - - - Mil. 31 

— mystery of man, from what a depth - Wor. 584 

— Nancy, wilt thou go with me - - Burns 302 

— nature ! all thy seasons please - - - Fav. 118 

— ne'er be Clanronald the valiant forgot ! - Hem. 335 

— never say that I was false of heart - - Sha. 1041 

— nightingale, best poet of the grove - - Tho. 462 

— nightingale ! thou surely art - - - Wor. 171 

— no— not e'en when first we loved - - Moore 526 

— none in all the world before - - - Whi. 285 

— Norah, lay your basket down - - - Whi. 171 

— north, with all thy vales of green ! - - Bry. 312 

— not by graves. (W. R Wallace.) - - Fav. 212 

— nothing earthly save the ray - - - Poe 131 

— now that the genius of BeAvick were mine - Wor. 485 

— once I loved a bonny lass - Burns 189 

— once the harp of Innisf all ! - - - - Cam. 134 

— Ono Chrio," Remarks on - - - - Burns 314 



369 o 

O, open the door," Remarks on - - Burns 294 

— open the door, some pity to show - - Scott 377 

— open the door to me - Burns 251 

— pale art thou, my lamp - White 367 

— pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth - Sha, 776 

— patent, pen-inventing Perrian Perry ! - Hood 346 

— peace! O come with me and dwell - - Hood 459 

— peace, that on a lilied bank doth love - Col. 51 

— peace ! the fairest child of heaven - - Tho. 470 

— people chosen ! are ye not - Whi. 317 

— Philly, happy be that day— a song - Burns 267 

— pillow cold and wet with" tears - - - She. 574 

— pity that I pause ------ Erne. 187 

— plant them above me the soft and bright Flo. 106 

— pleasant exercise of hope and joy ! - - Wor. 190 

— plump head- waiter at the Cock - - Ten. 108 

— poet rare and old ! - - - - - - Whi. 165 

— poortith cauld— a song - Burns 249 

— praise an tanks ! De Lord ho come - - Whi. 269 

— precious evenings ! all too swiftly sped ! - Lon. 134 

— progeny of heaven ! empyreal thrones ! - Mil. 47 

— prophetic bird so bright - Goe. 81 

— purblind race of miserable men - - - Ten. 269 

— quam bellus homo es ! - Her. 560 

— raging fortune's withering blast - - Burns 196 

— rattlin', roarin' Willie - - - Burns 217 

— reader ! hast thou ever stood to see - - Flo. 202 

— remember the time Moore 651 

— river, gentle river ! gliding on Bry. 237 
-*■ river of yesterday, with current swift - Lon. 383 

— river-side, where soft green rushes - - Flo. 212 

— Romeo, Romeo ! wherefore art thou - Sha. 720 

— rose who dares to name thee - Bro. 294 ; Flo. 281 

— rough, rude, ready-witted Rankine - - Burns 149 

— sacred Providence, who from end to end - Her. 22Q 

— sad and heavy should I part - - -' Burns 273 

— sad No More! O sweet No More! - - Ten. 482 

— saw ye bonny Leslie ----- Burns 234 

— saw ye my dear, my Phely? - - Burns 265 

— saw ye my dearie — a song - - - Burns 245 

— saw ye not fair Ines? - Hood 135 ; Poe 39 ; Fav. 162 

— say not, my love ----- Scott 3S4 

— scenes of my childhood and dear to my Cam. 259 

— sclum lepidum ! circumstant undique f ratres Her. 568 

— see those cherries ----- Moore 654 

— send Lewie Gordon hame - - - - Burns 313 

— seraph, pause no more ! - - - - - Bro. 9 

— shame to thee, land of the Gaul ! - - Byron 235 

— she was good ac she was fair - - - Rog. 221 

— sight ! the mother of desires - - - Dry. 557 

24 



370 



O, silvery streamlet of the fields - - - Bry. 

— sleep, O gentle sleep ----- Sha. 

— sleep, we are beholden to thee, sleep - - Ing. 

— slight respect of man's nobility ! - - Dante 

— slow to smite and swift to spare - - - Bry. 

— snatched away in beauty's bloom - - Byron 

— sole in whom my thoughts find all repose - Mil. 

— son, in whom my soul hath chief delight Mil. 

— soon return ! ----- Moore 

— sorrow wilt thou rule my blood - - - Ten. 

— source of the holiest joys we inherit - Mer. 

— sovereign of an isle renowned ------ Cow. 

— sovran, virtuous, precious of all trees - Mil. 

— spirit-land ! thou land of dreams ! • - Hem. 

— spirit of the blest ! White 

— spiteful bitter thought ! --•-.- Her. 

— state prayer-founded ! never hung - - Whi. 

— stay, Madonna !------ Mac. 

— ■ stay, sweet warbling woodlark - - Burns 

— steer her up — a song - Burns 

— stern, yet lovely monitress ! Wil. 

— stranger ! if Anacreon's shell - - Moore 

— stream of life ! the violet springs - - Bry. 

— strong up welling prayers of faith - - Whi. 

— suffering, sad humanity ! - - Lon. 

— swallow chirping in the sparkling eaves - Mer. 

— swallow, swallow, flying, flying south - Ten. 

— swear not by the moon - Sha. 

— sweet be thy sleep in the land of the grave Burns 

— sweet illusions of song ----- Lon. 

— sweet pale Margaret Ten. 

— sweet sir, for your courtesie - - Burns 

— take the pure gem to where southerly breezes She. 

— tarry woo is ill to spin - Burns 

— teach me to love thee - - - - Moore 

— tell it not in Gath nor spread - - - Wes. 

— tell me, Harper, wherefore flow - - Scott 

— tenderly the haughty day - Erne. 

— that a chariot of cloud were mine — a fragment She. 

— that a man might know - Sha. 

— that a song would sing itself to me - Lon. 

— that he were here to write me down an ass Sha. 

— that I could a sin once see - - - Her. 

— thals I had ne'er been married— a song Burns 

— that I were a glove upon that hand - Sha. 

— that mine enemy had written a book ! - She. 

— that my faltering heart may smite - - Wes. 

— that my father had ne'er on me smiled Burns 

— that Pieria's spring would through my 

breast - - - - - - - Cow, 579 



212 
422 
465 
296 
316 
191 
111 

67 
652 
194 

83 
466 
212 
233 
233 
254 
212 
188 
283 
272 
270 

61 
212 
185 

39 
460 
144 
720 
140 
228 

53 
316 
564 
307 
347 
272 
386 
173 
101 
785 
384 
128 
147 
289 
719 
311 
273 
450 



371 



O, that sweet season on the April verge - Her. 447 

— that the chemist's niagic art - Fav. 207 ; Hog. 238 

— that this too too solid flesh would melt - Sha, 814 

— that those lips had language ! Life has passed Cow. 471 

— that way madness lies ----- Sha. 863 

— that word regret !----- i n g. 394 

— that you were yourself ! but love — a sonnet Sha. 1029 

— the days are gone when beauty bright - Moore 233 

— the heart that has truly loved"never - - Flo. 150 

— the joys of our evening posada - - Moore 657 

— the life that stirs in the panting rose - - Wil. 323 

— the long and dreary winter - - - Fav. 196 

— the merry May has pleasant hours Flo. 537 ; Wil. 292 

— the shamrock ! Moore 241 

— the sight entrancing - - - Moore 268 

— the spring, the bountiful spring ! - - Flo. 408 

— then remember me - Moore 213 

— there are looks and tones that dart - Moore 478 

— there are spirits in the air - - - She. 394 

— there are times ------- Hoi. 6 

— there is blessing in this gentle breeze - - Wor. 501 
■ — thicker, deeper, darker growing - - Whi. 284 

— think not my spirits are always as light Moore 217 

— think when a hero is sighing - - - Moore 301 

— this is no my ain house - Burns 328 

— thou almighty Father, who dost make - Dante 156 

— thou bright-beaming god. the plains - - Sch. 107 

— thou by long experience tried - - - Cow. 621 

— thou by whose expressive art - - - Cam. 222 

— thou child of many prayers ! - - - Lon. 39 

— thou cruel deadly-lovely maiden - - Goe. 194 

— thou degenerate child of the great - - Sch. 223 

— thou dread Power, who reignest above ! Burns 96 

— thou great Being ! what thou art - - Burns 35 

— thou great wrong, that, through - - - Bry. 317 

— thou ! " her words she thus without delay Dante 229 

— thou immortal deity — a fragment - - She. 507 

— thou ! in Hellas deemed of heavenly birth Byron 278 

— thou in whom we live and move - - Burns 188 

— thou invisible spirit of wine - - - Sha. 891 

— thou most fatal of Pandora's train - White 343 

— thou my lovely boy, who in thy power — a 

sonnet Sha. 1043 

— thou, of all creation blest - Moore 40 

— thou of soul and sense and breath - - Hoi. 266 

— thou pale orb, that silent shines - - Burns 81 

— thou sweet maiden fair ----- Goe. 64 

— thou that with surpassing glory crowned Mil. 84 

— thou the first, the greatest friend - - Burns 38 

— thou token loved of joys now perished - Goe. 61 



'6i2 



0, thou unknown, almighty Cause Burns 37 ; Fav. 44 

— thou vast ocean ! ever sounding sea - - Fav. 338 

— thou, well-tried in grief - Goe. 396 

— thou wert lovely — lovely was thy frame - Eog. 197 

— Thou, wha in the heavens dost dwell - Burns 42 

— thou ! whatever title please thine ear - - Pope 122 

— Thou ! whatever title suit thee - - Burns 53 

— Thou, who at love's hour ecstatically - - Eos. 228 

— Thou who dryest the mourner's tear - Moore 341 

— thou who in my early youth - - White 330 

— thou, who kindly dost provide - - - Burns 187 

— thou who movest onward with a mind - Wor. 487 

— thou who plumed with strong desire - She. 429 

— thou whom poesy abhors - - - Burns 179 

— Thou, whose captain I account myself - Sha. 588 

— thou whose dear love gleamed - - - She. 566 

— Thou ! whose face hath felt the winter's wind Keats 252 

— Thou ! whose fancies from afar are brought Wor. 87 

— thou whose fringed lids I gaze upon - - Ten. 471 

— Thou, whose presence went before - - Whi. 54 

— Thou, whose special grace - Wes. 31 

— thou, whose tender serious eyes - - Tho. 463 

— Thou, whose wise paternal love - - - Wes. 132 

— thou, wild fancy, check thy wing ! - - Col. 36 

— Tibbie, I hae seen the day - - - Burns 190 

— 'tis a touching thing to make one weep - Hood 183 

— to have dwelt in Bethlehem - Bro. 383 

— truant muse, what shall be thy amends — a 

sonnet - - Sha. 1040 

— true and tried, so well and long - - . Ten. 216 

— tyrant love ! hast thou possessed - - - Pope 356 

— unhappy stars ! your fate I mourn - - Goe. 65 

— universal mother, who dost keep - - - She. 522 

— virgin mother, daughter of thy Son - Dante 357 

— wad some power the giftie gie us - - Burns 76 

— wanderer ! would thy heart forget - - Hem. 330 

— waning moon, that with diminished - - Flo. 407 

— war, thou hast thy fierce delight - - Scott 283 

— was not I a weary wight ! Burns 314 

— wat ye wha's in yon toun — a song - - Burns 282 

— wat ye what my Minnie did? — a song - Burns 276 

— we will go a-Maying, love - Flo. 56 

— weary heart ! thou'rt half-way home - - Wil. 65 

— weather-cock on the village spire - - Lon. 399 

— weep for Moncontour ! ----- Mac. 153 

— weep for the hour ----- Moore. 222 

— weep for those that wept by Babel's stream Byron 191 

— well doth freedom battle ! Men have made Hem. 304 

— well for him whose will is strong ! - - Ten. 252 

— well may Essex sit forlorn - - - Whi. 411 



373 o 

O, were I able to rehearse. (Skinner.) - Burns 334 

— were I on Parnassus hill — a song - Burns 211 

— were my love yon lilac fair - Burns 531 ; Flo. 176 

— wert thou in the cauld blast — a song - Burns 287 

— wha is she that lo'es me? — a song - - Burns 291 

— wha my babie-clouts will buy ? - - - Burns 197 

— wha will to St. Stephen's house - - Burns 211 

— whare did ye get that hauver meal bannock ? Burns 206 

— whare'll our guidman lie - - - - Burns 336 

— what a cunning guest ... - Her. 214 

— what a deal of scorn looks ... - Sha. 293 

— what a face was hers to brighten light - Low. 28 

— what a fall was there ----- gha. 778 

— what a goodly outside falsehood - - Sha. 184 

— what a goodly scene ! - - - - - Col. 17 

— what a noble mind is here o'erthrown ! - Sha. 826 

— what a pure and sacred thing - - Moore 427 

— what a tangled web we weave - - - Scott 100 

— what a tempest whirled us hither ! - Moore 132 

— what a thing is man ! ... - Her. 216 

— what a world of vile - • - - - - Sha. 56 

— what a wreck — a sonnet - - - Wor. 249 

— what are heroes, prophets, men - - - Erne. 309 

— what can ail thee, knight-at-arms - - Keats 240 

— what is heaven but the fellowship - - Erne. 297 

— what men dare do Sha. 125 

— what's befallen Bessie Brown - - - Hood 539 

— what's the matter? Wor. 456 

— when I left my home Fav. 342 

— when I was a tiny boy - - - Hood 453 

— when shall the grave hide forever- - Byron. 136 

— when the heart is full— when bitter - Mil. 29 

— when wilt thou return - Hem. 362 

— where live ye, my bonny lass - - - Burns 248 

— where would bonnie Annie lie? (Ramsay.) Burns 336 

— wherefore come ye forth in triumph from 

the north ------- Mac. 155 

— wherefore need I busk my head - - Burns 319 

— where's the slave ----- Moore 252 

— whistle and I'll come to you, my lad Burns 208, 255 

— who can hold a fire in his hand - Sha. 361 

— who can speak his joys - Flo. 61 

— who is he that hath his whole life - - Wor. 591 

— who rides by night through the woodland Scott 371 

— who shall pour into my swollen eyes - Spe. 583 

— who that shared them ever shall forget - Scott 293 

— who the speed of bird and wind - - Whi. 88 

— who will give me tears? - - - - Her. 264 

— who will show me those delights on high Her. 292 

— who would cherish life - White 2&Q 



Ode " ^ * 

0, who would feed on dreams forever - - Sen. 281 

— why should the girl of my soul be in tears Moore 74 

— why so silent, love, I pray? - - - Scott 245 

— why the deuce should I repine - - Burns 37 

— wild west wind, thou breath of Autumn's She. 417 

— will ye bear a mirthful bourd? - - -Scott 460 

— will you hear a knightly tale - - - Scott 368 

— Willie brew'd a peck o' maut — a song Burns 218 

— Willy, weel I mind, I lent you my hand Burns 302 

— wilt thou go wi' me, sweet Tibbie Dunbar? Burns 223 

— wilt thou have my hand, dear - - - Bro. 294 

— withered is the garland of the war - - Sha. 938 

— withered winter blossoms - Hood 542 

— woman ! if by simple wile - - - Moore 102 

— woman ! in our hours of ease - Scott 103 

— woman, thou secret past knowing - - Wil. 185 

— wonderful, wonderful, and most - - Sha. 216 

— world! O life! O time! - - She. 440 

— would I resemble the country-girls fair - Goe. 29 

— would we were further ! O would we - Goe. 130 

— wretched Britain — a fragment - - - Pope 402 

— ye, all ye that walk in Willowwood - - Eos. 252 

— ye dead !-,-■----- Moore 264 

— ye dead poets, who are living still - - Lon. 381 

— ye in chosen fellowship advanced - - Dante 324 

— ye kindly nymphs who dwell - Goe. 269 

— ye wha are sae guid yoursel - - - Burns 78 

— ye who love to overhang the springs - - Bry. 321 

— ye whose cheek the tear of pity stains - Burns 176 

— yes I will own we were dear to each other Byron 174 

— yes, so well, so tenderly - Moore 652 

— yes, they love through all this world of ours Bro. 163 

— yes, when the bloom Moore 652 

— yet we trust that somehow good - - - Ten. 193 

— yonder is the well-known spot - - - Whi. 331 

— you chorus of indolent reviewers - - Ten. 395 

— you that were eyes and light to the king Ten. 729 

— young Lochinvar is come out of the west - Scott 85 

— youth ! for years so many and so sweet - Col. 18 

O'Connor's child - Cam. 134 

O'Donoghue's mistress ----- Moore 265 

O'Neil, Shelah — a song - Burns 291 

O'Ruark, Song of Moore 244 

Oak and the broom, The Wor. 143 

— of Guernica — a sonnet ... - Wor. 281 

— The - Low. 77 

— To an old - - - - - - - Eog. 235 

— tree, To an - - - - - - - Scott 393 

Oaks of Monte Luca. (Michelangelo.) - Lon. 464 

Obedience Her. 194 



375 



o 

Ode 



Oberon and Titania's wedding-feast - - Faust 152 

Oberon, c. in Midsummer-night s Dream - Sha. 161 

Oblation of a sick child ----- Wes. 49 
Obligations of civil to religious liberty — a 

sonnet - Wor. 373 

Obliged by hunger and request of friends - Pope 265 

Oblivion, Fountain of - - - - Hem. 239 

— throw thy veil in mercy o'er the records - Wor. 385 
Obscurest night involved the sky - - - Cow. 509 
Observe how it will be at last - Bro. 611 

— that tall pale veteran ! what a look - - Cra. 409 

— when mother earth is dry - - - Moore 33 

— yon tenement apart and small - - - Cra. 447 

Observed of all observers Sha. 826 

Occasional address ------ Moore 333 

— hymns - Wes. 59 

— poems- ... - Byron 228 ; Whi. 277, 318 
Occultation of Orion, The ----- Lon. 84 
Ocean, Address to the. (B. W. Procter.) - Fav. 338 

— Sonnet to the ------- Hood 180 

Oceanus, c. in Prometheus Bound - - Bro. 115 

Octavia, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 

Octavio Piccolomini, c. in The Piccolomini Col. 407 

Octavius Caesar, c. in Julius Caesar - - - Sha. 764 

c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - - Sha. 911 

October - - - Bry. 99, 327; Flo. 501; Spe. 554 

Ode at opening of International exhibition Ten. 389 

— Centennial, 1876 Low. 416 

— for a social meeting Hoi. 176 

— for agricultural celebration - - - Bry. 46 

— for Washington's birthday - - - - Hoi. 138 

— from Anacreon. (Moore.) - - - Flo. 104 

— from the French Byron 259 

— in Greek ------- Moore 15 

— "In the old days of awe " - - - - Low. 11 

— July 4, 1857 ------- Erne. 173 

— " Oh, shame to thee " - Byron 235 

— on a May morning Wor. 433 

— on immortality ------ Wor. 498 

— on marriage of a friend - Cow. 41 

— on reading "Sir Charles Grandison" - - Cow. 39 

— on St. Cecilia's day Pope 351 

— on solitude - - Pope 358 

— on the late Henry Kirke White - - White 218 

— to beauty - - Erne. 81 

— to departing year ----- Col. 132 

— to duty - Wor. 421 

— to goddess Ceres ------ Moore 616 

— to island of St. Helena - Byron 240 

— to Lycoris Wor. 425 



Ode q*7£ 

Oft 6 < ° 

Ode t© memory of Mrs. Oswald - - Burns 115 

— to Milton, by Francini - Cow. 531 

— to Napoleon Bonaparte - - Byron 197 

— to ruin -------- Burns 82 

— to superstition ------ ~Rog. 330 

— to the assertors of liberty - - - - She. 416 

— to the past - - - - - Byron 245 

— to the Sublime Porte ----- Moore 638 

— to William Henry Channmg - - - Erne. 71 
Odes ------- Dry. 527; Moore 110 

— and poems - - - - - - - Col. 191 

— of Anacreon - Moore 22 

— of Horace translated ----- Cow. 533 

— to Behrisch ------- Goe. 1 60 

— to Nea, at Bermuda - Moore 136 
Odin, Wraith of ----- - Lon. 250 

Odius in woolen ! 'twould a saint provoke - Pope 230 

Odor, The ------- Her. 277 

Odysseus - Sen. 222 

CEdipus " — an epilogue ----- Dry. 518 

— Incantation in ------ Dry. 553 

— Prologue to - - - - - - - Dry. 488 

CEdipus Tyrannus — a tragedy - - - - She. 323 

CEnone - Ayt. 175; Ten. 31 

O'er better waves to speed her rapid course Dante 121 

— field and plain, in childhood's artless days G-oe. 215 

— hill, and dale, and distant sea - - - Hood 153 

— me, — how I cannot say - Goe. 87 

— mountains bright with snow and light Moore 529 

— the bare woods whose outstretched hands Whi. 208 

— the glad waters of the dark blue sea - Byron 28 

— the Mediterranean sea - Goe. 370 

— the mist-shrouded cliffs - - - Burns 198 

— the moor amang the heather," Eemarks on Burns 337 

— the smooth enameled green - - - - Mil. 432 

— the soft atmosphere of this temple of grace Mer. 33 

— the wide earth, on mountain — a sonnet - Wor. 279 
O'erweening statesmen have full long relied — 

a sonnet Wor. 282 

Of a dejected spirit ------ Wes. 134 

— a fair toun where Doctor Rack was guide Cra. 88 

— a' the airts the wind can blaAv - - Burns 210 

— Adam's first wife, Lilith, it is told - - Eos. 158, 265 

— all dramatic writing, comic wit - - - Dry. 512 

— all flowers, methinks a rose - - - Flo. 516 

— all my happiest hours of joy - - Moore 94 

— all old women hard of hearing - - - Hood 291 

— all our antic sights and pageantry - - Dry. 147 

— all our pains since man was curst - - Hood 509 

— all speculations the market holds forth Moore 645 



377 



Ode 
Oft 



Of all that orient lands can vaunt - - Whi. 201 

— all that, to the sage's survey - - Moore 573 

— all the beauteous wares - Goe. 35 

— all the birds on bush or tree - Scott 431 

— all the causes which conspire to blind - Pope 46 

— all the fair months that round the sun Moore 265 

— all the fairest cities of the earth - - Rog. 77 

— all the gifts thine hand bestows - - - Cow. 93 

— all the men one meets about - - - Moore 646 

— all the months that fill the year - - - Flo. 33 

— all the numerous ills that hurt - - - Burns 67 

— all the palaces so fair ----- Scott 76 

— all the rides since the birth of time - - Whi. 225 

— all the. thoughts of God that are - - - Bro. 70 

— all who hail thy presence - - - - Poe 162 

— all wits' uses the main one - Erne. 289 

— beasts there have been chosen four - - Goe. 386 

— better and brighter days to come - - Sch. 221 

— earth and heaven God is the light - P. of F. 181 

— Edenhall, the youthful lord - Lon. 28 

— English blood, of Tuscan birth - - - Bro. 149 

— Florence and of Beatrice - Eos. 56 

— gentle blood, his parents' only treasure - Dry. 316 

— gentle Philips will I ever sing - - - Pope 381 

— heaven's prodigious years man - - P. of F. 134 

— humblest friends, bright creature - - Wor. 458 

— life which all can take but none can give L. of A. 93 

— love that never found his earthly close - Ten. 85 

— manners gentle, of affection mild - - Pope 347 

— man's first disobedience, and the fruit - Mil. 15 

— manufactures, trade, inventions, rare - Cra. 366 

— mortal parents is the hero born - - - Wor. 278 

— my extreme distresses - Wes. 267 

— Nelson and the north - - - - - Cam. 146 

— old sat freedom on the heights - - - Ten. 57 

— old, the sultan genius reigned - - Moore 607 

— old, when Scarron his companions invited Gol. 115 

— one that loved not wisely but too well - Sha. 910 

— our amusements, ask you? — we amuse - Cra. 371 

— Prometheus, how undaunted - - - Lon. 211 

— this world's theater in which we stay - Spe. 696 

— those immortal dead who live again - - Eliot 139 

— what an easy, quick access - - - Her. 193 

— writing many books there is no end - - Bro. 363 

— yore in old England, it was not thought good Scott 447 

Off with his head ! - Sha. 574 

Offering, An ------- Her. 245 

Offspring of Jove, Calliope, once more - - She. 521 

Oft are the greatest talents to be found - Rog. 343 

— expectation fails, and most oft - - - Sha. 260 



Oft o>-q 

On 0.<V 

Oft has our poet wished this happy seat - Dry. 521 

— have I caught, upon a fitful breeze - - Wor. 405 

— have I offered up the blind - - - Wes. 291 

— have I seen at some cathedral door - - Lon. 322 

— have I seen, ere Time had plowed my cheek Wor. 230 

— have I unconcerned passed by Wes. 289 

— I had heard of Lucy Gray - - - Wor. 82 

— I remember those whom I have known - Lon. 414 

— in the stilly night ----- Moore 524 

— is the medal faithful to its trust - - - Wor. 465 

— o'er my brain does that strange fancy roll Col. 98 

— oft, methinks, the while with thee - - Col. 165 

— through thy fair domains - Wor. 595 

— we enhance our ills by discontent - - Cow. 523 

— when my spirit doth spread her bolder wings* Spe. 699 
Often faint yet still pursuing - Wes. 260 

— I think of the beautiful town - - - Lon. 219 
Of tentimes excusing of a fault - - - - Sha. 347 

— to win us to our harm - Sha. 790 
Oina-Morul -------- Oss. 235 

Oithona - - Oss. 243 

Oker Hill, Tradition of— a sonnet - - -Wor. 246 

Olaf, Saga of king ------ Lon. 246 

— the king, one summer morn - - - Lon. 251 
Old abbeys — a sonnet ----- Wor. 379 

— age — a sonnet - Lon. 393 

— age, In Wes. 135 

— age, Poems on ------ Wor. 480 

— Albion sat on a crag of late - Ihg. 141 

— and new art— three sonnets - Eos. 263 

— and the new year (anon.) - Fav. 305 

— as I am, for ladies' love unfit - Dry. 462 
Old Bathory, c. in Zapolya - Col. 250 

— bridge at Florence ------ Lon. 368 

— burying-ground, The ----- Whi. 240 

— Cambridge (Mass.) --.... Hoi. 304 

— camp, The - Ayt. 188 

— clock on the stairs - Fav. 1 11 ; Lon. 89 

— cruiser, The ------- Hoi. 225 

— Cumberland beggar, The - Wor. 480 

— Danish song-book, To an - - - - Lon. 88 

— events have modern meanings - - - Low. 358 

— father antic, the law Sha. 383 

— folks' room (anon.) ----- Fav. 313 

— friend, kind friend ! lightly down - - Whi. 173 

— home, The. (Tennyson.) - - - Fav. 63 

— Ironsides ------- Hoi. 1 

— John of Gaunt, time-honored - - - Sha. 356 

— man broken with the storms - - - Sha. 614 

— man by the brook. (Wordsworth.) - - Fav. 78 



379 



Oft 
On 



Old man dreams Hoi. 210 

— man of the sea ..._-- Hoi. 151 

— man upon the green hillside - - - Ing. 357 

— man's comforts, The. (Southey.) - - Fav. 417 

— man's counsel, The ----- Bry. 191 

— man's funeral, The Bry. 49 

— Meg she was a gypsy ----- Keats 265 

— ocean's gray and melancholy waste - - Bry. 22 

— Peter Grimes made fishing his employ - Cra. 461 

— player, The ------ - Hoi. 105 

— Eip Van Winkle had a grandson Rip - Hoi. 280 

— St. David's at Radnor ----- Lon. 398 

— Scottish cavalier - Ayt. 156 

— Shepherd, c. in Winter's Tale - - - Sha. 304 

— song ended ------- Ros. 107 

— south " church, Appeal for - Hoi. 311 

— south " church, In the - - - - Whi. 408 

— testament gospel ------ Cow. 65 

— time, in whose Bank we deposit our notes Hoi. 233 

— wife's song - Ing. 462 

— winter was gone ------ She. 474 

— winter with his frosty beard - - Burns 141 

— woman, Epigram on an - - - Cow. 516 

— world and new, The. (Geo. Berkeley.) - Fav. 427 

— year, Death of the ----- Ten. 54 

— year song, An - Hoi. 243 

— year's blessing Pro. 392 

Oldcastle, Sir John (Lord Cobham) - - Ten. 707 

Oldest sins the newest kind of ways? - - Sha. 432 

Oldham, Mr., To memory of - Dry. 295 

Olger the Dane and Desiderio - - - Lon. 294 

Olimpio, an assassin, c. in The Cenci - - She. 268 

Oliver Basselin ------ Lon. 217 

Oliver of Clisson, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 232 

— son of Sir Rowland, c. in As You Like It Sha. 205 
Olivia, c. in Twelfth Night - Sha. 281 

— c. in Good-natured Man - Gol. 178 
Olney hymns ------- Cow. 52 

— Sunday-school, Hymn for - Cow. 468 
Olor Iscanus queries : why should we - - Whi. 261 

Olympus Lon. 343 

Om !— reverence to Ganesha - - - I. S. S. 10 

Omittance is no quittance - Sha. 221 

On a bank of flowers, in a summer sky - Burns 224 

— a day, alack the day ! - - - Sha. 147, 1052 

— a mound an Arab lay ----- Erne. 89 

— a rocky peak once sat I early - - - Goe. 253 

— beds of snow the moonbeams slept - Moore 100 

— board the '76 Low. 383 

— bravely through the sunshine - - - Eme. 276 



On 

Once 



380 



On bridges small and bridges great - - Goe. 233 

— Cessnock banks there lives a lass - Burns 190 

— Christmas-eve the bells were rung - - Flo. 198 

— coop or kennel he hangs parian wreaths - Erne. 42 

— England's shore I saw a pensive band - Cam. 257 

— every nose he rightly read - - - - Sch. 306 

— fair Loch-Ranza streamed the early day Scott 285 

— fame's eternal bead-roll worthy to be filed Spe. 292 

— forfune : s cap we are not the very buttons Sha. 822 

— Hallow-mass eve, ere you boune ye to rest Scott 392 

— hearing lady Byron was ill Byron 226 

— her white breast a sparkling cross she wore Pope 68 

— his bold visage middle age - - - Scott 114 

— his morning rounds the master - - - Wor. 420 

— horror's head horrors accumulate - - Sha. 896 

— Hounslow heath and close beside the road Hood 382 

— Jordan's banks ------ Byron 191 

— king Olaf 's bridal night - - - - Lon. 252 

— Linden when the sun was low - - - Cam. 150 

— life's vast ocean diversely we sail - - Pope 197 

— loitering muse — the swift stream chides us Wor. 329 

— man, on nature, and on human life - - Wor. 596 

— Margate beach where the sick one roams Hood 534 

— page of thine I cannot trace - Whi. 71 

— Petrarch's heart, all other days before - Goe. 220 

— prince or bride no diamond - - - - Erne. 247 

— St. Baron's tower, commanding - - Lon. 376 

— some fond breast the parting soul relies - Fav. 33 

— sunny slope and beechen swell - - - Lon. 10 

— Susquehanna's side, fair Wyoming ! - - Cam. 75 

— that great, that awful day - - - Mac. 163 

— the blue flower which Brahmans say - Moore 414 

— the borders of Cannock chase - - - Ing. 444 

— the cold earth divine Patroclus spread - Iliad 356 

— the cross-beam under the Old South bell Wil. 73 

— the cross the dying Savior - Lon. 93 

— the door you will not enter - Bro. 99 

— the first early dawn of grace - - - Wes. 274 

— the gray sea-sands ----- Lon. 260 

— the green banks of Shannon - Cam. 209 

— the green leaf mine eyes were fixed - - Dante 200 

— the green little isle of Inchkenneth - - Lon. 378 

— the green margin of the brook - - - Cow. 46 

— the hill - - - Ten. 489 

— the holy mount of Ida - Ayt. 175 

— the isle of Penikese ----- Whi. 383 

— the lake — a song - - - - - - Goe. 51 

— the mountain's breezy summit - - - Sch. 122 

— the rocks of Aberdeen - - - - Ing. 511 

— the sea. (Bayard Taylor.) - Fav. 144 



381 



On 

Once 



On the seas and far away — a song - - Burns 263 

— the wide lawn the snow lay deep - - Whi. 413 

— the wide level of a mountain's head - Col. 87 

— thee, blest youth, a father's hand - - Eog. 241 

— this sweet bank your head thrice sweet - Eos. 233 

— thou sailor undaunted ----- Sen. 225 

— to Iona ! — a sonnet ----- Wor. 406 

— two days it steads not to run - - - Erne. 248 

— wings of wind came flying all abroad - Pope 270 

— with the dance ! let joy be unconfined Byron 304 

— woodlands ruddy with autumn - - Bry. 313 

— yonder lofty mountain ----- Goe. 55 
Once --------- Mer. 194 

— a boy a rose-bud spied ----- Goe. 22 

— a lively image of human nature - - Tho. 448 

— a new world, the sun-swart mariner e - - Ing. 465 

— a stranger youth to Corinth came - - Goe. 135 

— again, — but how changed since - - - Scott 399 

— did she hold the gorgeous east in fee - Wor. 270 

— early in the morning ----- She. 569 

— fondly loved and still remembered dear - Burns 93 

— for the scepter of Germany - - - - Sen. 224 

— git a smell o' musk into a draw - - Low. 270 

— hardly in a cycle blossometh - - - Low. 22 

— I beheld the fairest of her kind - - Dry. 291 

— I could hail (howe'er serene the sky) - - Wor. 453 

— I held a well-carved brimming goblet - Goe. 198 

— I wished I might rehearse - Erne. 172 

— in a golden hour - ----- Ten. 386 

— in a lonely hamlet I sojourned - - - Wor. 114 

— in each revolving year - - Moore 36 

— in the flight of ages past - Fa v. 81 

— into a quiet village ----- Lon. 133 

— it is written, Abraham, God's friend - P. of F. 40 

— it smiled a silent dell ----- Poe 91 

— more - - Hoi. 223 

— more and yet once more - White 371 

— more descend — a fragment - She. 501 

— more, dear friends, you meet beneath - Whi. 267 

— more, enchanting maid, adieu ! - - - Rog. 244 

— more enchantress of the soul - - - Rog. 237 

— more, O mountains of the north, unveil - Whi. 278 

— more, O my friend, to your arms - - Mer. 76 

— more, O Trent! along thy pebbly marge White 311 

— more on yonder laureled height - - Whi. 280 

— more, once more, Inarime - Lon. 374 

— more sweet stream ! with slow foot wandering Col. 35 

— more the changed year's turning wheel - Eos. 267 
■ — more the church is seized with sudden fear Wor. 365 

— more the gate behind me falls - - - Ten. 82 



Once o o o 

One ^°- 

Once more, then, much- wept shadow - - Goe. 200 

— more to the breach, dear friends - - - Sha. 448 

— more upon the waters, yet once more ! - Byron 302 

— more, ye sacred towers ----- Hoi. 275 

— on a day in Paradise - - - - P. of F. 15 

— on a time, some centuries ago - - - Lon. 304 

— on a time there walked a mariner - - Ing. 445 

— on a time there was a pool - . - - Low. 258 

— on the top of Tynwald's formal mound - Wor. 403 

— says an author where I need - - - Pope 378 

— the emperor Charles of Spain - - - Lon. 215 

— the nine all weeping came ------ Sch. 305 

— this soft turf, this rivulet's sands - - Bry. 181 

— through the forest ------ Goe. 27 

— to a horse-fair, it may - - Sch. 277 

— to every man and nation comes the moment Low. 68 

— to the song and chariot-fight - - - Sch. 140 

— two persons uninvited ----- Goe. 237 

— upon a midnight dreary - - Fav. 172 ; Poe 51 

— upon a time I lay - Ing. 218 

— upon Iceland's solitary strand - - - Lon. 385 

— when I a spider had killed - - - - Goe. 370 

— wisdom dwelt in tomes -■ Sch. 286 
One above reproach, The - - - - P. of F. 149 

— after one the stars have risen and set - Low. 38 

— autumn night in Sudbury town - - - Lon. 232 

— broad white sail in Spezzia's treacherous bay Hoi. 129 

— bumper at parting ----- Moore 242 

— by one -------- Pro. 34 

— chorus let all being rise -■-■-- Pope 222 

— circle of all its golden hours - - - Mer. 213 

— clear idea wakened in the breast - - Moore 369 

— country - Hoi. 252 

— crowded hour of glorious life - - - Scott 406 

— day a shameless and impudent wight - Goe. 232 

— day along the electric wire - - - - Whi. 188 

— day as I warily did gaze - - - - Spe. 690 

— day as I was going by - - - - - Hood 475 

— day, Haroun Al Easchid read - - - Lon. 378 

— day I heard Mary say - Burns 314 

— day I sought with her heart-thrilling eyes Spe. 689 

— day I wrote her name upon the strand - Spe. 700 

— day, it was before a civic dinner - - Hood 386 

— day the Chinese bird of royalty - - Moore 612 

— day the dreary old king of death - - Hood 376 

— day the god of fond desire - Tho. 461 

— day the muses twined the hands - - Moore 33 

— day whiles that my daily cares did sleep - Spe. 674 

— day, young frolic Cupid tried - - - Flo. 352 

— dear smile ------ Moore 652 



383 8S e oe 

One draught, kind fairy ! from that fountain Hem. 238 

— dream of passion and of beauty more ! - Hem. 163 

— feast, of holy days the crest - - - Low. 363 

— fire burns out another, burning - - - Sha. 715 

— flame- winged brought a white-winged - Eos. 231 

— heart's enough for me. (Augusta Mignon.) Fav. 134 

— hope, The — a sonnet - - - - Eos. 276 

— hoss shay, The ------ Hoi. 172 

— hour with thee ------ Scott 454 

— hundred years ago and something more - Lon. 283 

— hymn more, O my lyre - Whi. 88 

— in Paradise, To - Poe 84 

— kiss, dear maid ! I said and sighed - - Col. 33 

— launched a ship but she was wrecked at sea Ing. 438 

— may smile and smile and - - - - Sha. 818 

— memory trembles on our lips - - - Hoi. 231 

— might believe that natural miseries - - Wor. 273 

— more unfortunate - Fav. 139; Hood 119; Poe 41 

— morn a Peri at the gate - Moore 413 

— morning in Medina walked our Lord - P. of F. 77 

— morning in the blossoming May - - Flo. 453 

— morning of the first sad fall - Whi. 214 

— morning, oh ! so early - Ing. 509 
— - morning (raw it was and wet - - - Wor. 113 

— musician is sure Erne. 203 

— night as I did wander - Burns 196 

— night I dreamed I lay most easy - - Burns 317 

— night the nymph called country-dance Moore 604 

— of the solid margins bears us now - - Dante 50 

— of those heavenly days that cannot die - Wor. 170 

— of those passing rainbow dreams - - Moore 445 

— of two things Montrioli may have - - Eog. 149 

— of your old-world stories, Uncle John - Bry. 297 

— pair more. (Divan, iii.) -'-.-- Goe. 366 

— pair of eyes to gaze ----- Fav. 135 

— Pinch, a hungry, lean-faced villain - - Sha. 108 

— queen Artemisia, as old stories tell - Burns 186 

— sabbath day my friend and I - - - Whi. 341 

— science only will one genius fit - - - Pope 42 

— smile that solitary shines - Pope 301 

— spring-morning bright and fair - - Goe. 24 

— struggle more and I am free - - - Byron 247 

— summer morning when the sun was hot - Lon. 237 

— sung of thee who left the tale untold — a frag- 

ment ------- She. 504 

— that excels the quirks of blazoning - - Sha. 886 

— that loved not wisely but too well - - Sha. 910 

— that was a woman, sir - - - - - Sha. 841 

— that would peep and botanize - - - Wor. 416 

— The - - - - - - - - P. of F. 133 



oSSan 384 

One thought of thee puts all the pomp to flight Pope 115 

— touch of nature makes the whole world kin Sha. 639 

— truth is clear, whatever is, is right - - Pope 194 

— two and the third in Sha. 722 

— who was suffering tumult in his soul - Wor. 236 

— widow at a grave will sob - Hood 575 

— woe doth tread upon another's heels - Sha. 839 

— word is too often profaned -.-.-- She. 44.1 

— word to the guest we have gathered to greet Hoi. 256 

— writ with me in sad misfortune's - - Sha. 738 

— year ago — a ringing voice -•■-.-- Fav. 66 

— yellow star, the largest and the last - Mer. 190 
Onlie, Lady — a song ----- Burns 205 
Only a curl ----- Bro. 615; Fav. 399 

— a housemaid!" She looked from the 

kitchen— - - - - * - - Hoi. 308 

— a year. (Mrs. H. B. Stowe.) - - - Fav. 66 

— daughter, The - - - - - - Hoi. 33 

— one judge is just, for only one - P. of F. 101 

— one life (anon. ) - Fav. 272 

— this and nothing more Poe 51 

— two virtues exist, Oh, would they - - Sch. 262 

— while turns the wheel invisible - L. of A. 147 
Onora, Onora, her mother is calling - - Bro. 234 
Open afresh your round of starry folds - - Flo. 159 

— prospect — a sonnet - - - - - Wor. 329 

— question, An - Hood 402 

— table— a song - Goe. 94 

— the door to me, O— a song - - - Burns 251 

— window, The ------ L n. 132 

— your gates, ye everlasting piles ! - - - Wor. 380 
Opener, The - - . - - - - P. of F. 50 
Opening a placs for prayer, On - - - Cow. ■ 69 

— of the piano. The - Hoi. 181 ; Fav. 166 

— the window Hoi. 241 

— year, The. (Shelley.) - ' - Flo. 316 
Ophelia, dtr. of Polonius, c. in Hamlet - - Sha. 811 
Oppressed with grief, oppressed with care - Burns 82 
Optimus -------- p r o. 221 

Or, as sorrow has crossed the life-line in the 

palm -------- Mer. 37 

— I shall live your epitaph to make — a sonnet Sha. 1038 

— kettle whispering its faint under song - Wor. 418 

— they might watch the quoit-pitchers - Flo. 69 

— to take arms against a sea of troubles - Sha. 826 

— whether doth my mind, being crowned with 

you - -" Sha. 1042 

Ora pro me ------- Pro. 389 

Orange blossom, Poesy of the - Flo. 126 

— bough, The. (Mrs. Hemans.) - - - Flo. 128 



385 



One 
Ossian 



Orange tree, The. (Spenser.) - Flo. 126 

— tree, To an. (Wm. P. Palmer.) - - Flo. 288 
Oratio domini Georgii Herbert - - - Her. 531 

— qua Auspieatis-simum ... - Her. 517 
Oratione Dominica, De Her. 572 
Oratorio, Fragment of an - - - - Cam. 320 
Oratory, Effect of. (Croly.) - Fav. 171 
Orchomenus, In traveler's book at - - Byron 243 
Order gave each thing view --.-.- Sha. 593 

— is heaven's first law ----- Pope 211 

— of nature, The ------ Bry. 329 

Ordination, The - Burns 76 

Ordonio, Don. (Eemorse.) - Col. 310 

Orestes, c. in Clytemnestra - - - - Mer. 348 

Orford, Ellen - Cra. 447 

Organ-blower, The Hoi. 245 

Oriana, Ballad of - - - . - - - Ten. 20 

Oriental apologue, An ----- Low. 322 

Origin of dimples (anon.) ----- Flo. 453 

Origin of love, On the ----- Byron 252 

— of the harp - Moore 233 

Originals, To — an epigram - Goe. 222 

Orion, Occultation of Lon. 84 

Orla, Death of Calmar and - Byron 167 

Orlando, c. in As You Like It - - - - Sha. 205 

Orleans, Bastard of, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - Sha. 469 

— Duke of, c. in Henry v. -. Sha. 439 

— Maid of ------- Sch. 231 

— Master-gunner of, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - Sha. 469 
Ormond and Ossory, earl of, Sonnet to - Spe. 26 

— Duchess of ------ - Dry. 321 

Orphan hours, the year is dead ! - She. 436 ; Flo. 316 

— maid, The ------- Scott 420 

Orpheus -------- She. 464 

— with his lute made trees - Sha. 606 
Orsino, a prelate, c. in The Cenci - - - She. 268 

— duke of Illyria, c. in Twelfth Night - - Sha. 281 
Orthodox, orthodox ----- Burns 119 
Oscar of Alva— a tale - Byron 145 
Osgod, canon from Waltham, c. in Harold Ten. 615 
Osgood, Frances S. Dying rose-bud - - Flo. 97 

Epigram to ----- - Poe 85 

Valentine to Poe 76 

Osric, a courtier, c. in Hamlet - Sha. 811 

Ossawatomie, Brown of Whi. 258 

OSSIAN, Poems of: 



Battle of Lora 391 

Berrathon ..... 483 
Blair, Hugh, Dissertation of . .88 
Calthon and Colmal ... 254 

Caros, War of 261 

25 



Carric-Thura .... 209 

Carthon 222 

Cath-loda 189 

Cathlin of Clutha . . . .269 
Characters: Comala . Comala 203 



Ossian 
Our 



386 



Fingal— an epic 
Lathmon 
Lora, Battle of 
Oina-Morul . 
Oitliona . 
Plays: Comala . 
Songs of Selma 
Sul-Malda of Lumon 
Temora — an epic poem 
War of Caros 
— of Innis-Thona 



Characters : Dersagrena Comala 203 

— Fingal ... "203 

— Hidallan . . " 203 

— Melicoma . . " 203 

Colna-Dona 239 

Comala— a dramatic poem . 203 
Conlath and Cuthona . . . 479 

Croma 249 

Cuthullin, Death of . . .283 

Dar-Thula 369 

Dissertations on the poems 44, 57, 88 
Evir-Allen 28 

Ossian, Imitated from - - Byron 
Oswald, Mrs. , Ode to memory of - 

— c. in The Borderers ------ 

— steward of Goneril, c. in King Lear 

— a baron, c. in Doom of Devorgoil 
Othello— a tragedy ----- 
Othello's occupation gone - 

Other benefits— a sonnet 

— influences — a sonnet - 

— stones the era tell --■•-_ 
Othere, the old sea-captain 

Otho — a fragment ----- 

— the great— a tragedy - 
Otter, To the river — a sonnet 

Our ancient church ! its lonely tower 

— author, by experience, finds it true - 

— band is few but true and tried 

— banker --------- 

— bard, to modern epilogue a foe 

— boat is asleep on Serchio's stream - 

— bodily life, some plead — a sonnet 

— bosoms well bare for the glorious strife 

— bugles sang truce for the night cloud - 

— cake's dough on both sides 

— city of defense, to thee - 

— colors at Fort Sumter. (T. B. Aldrich.) 

— compelled sins stand no more 

— country's call 

— daily bread ------ 

— daily paths ------ 

— dead - 

— doctor had called in another - 

— doubts are traitors - 

— enemies have fallen, have fallen 

— eyeless bark sails free - 

— fancies are more giddy and infirm - 

— fathers' God ! from out whose hand - 

— fathers' land 

— fears do make us traitors 

— fellow-countrymen in chains 

— fellow- worshipers ----- 



115; Col. 

- Burns 

- Wor. 

Sha. 

- Scott 

- Sha. 

- Sha. 

- Wor. 
-Wor. 

Cow. 

- Lon. 

- She. 

- Keats 

Col. 

- Hoi. 
Dry. 

- Bry. 

- Hoi. 

- Tho. 
She. 

-Wor. 
Cam. 

- Cam. 

■ Sha. 

- Wes. 

■ Fav. 

- Sha. 
Bry. 

- Pro. 
Hem. 

- Pro. 
Ten. 

- Sha. 
Ten. 

- Erne. 

Sha. 

- Whi. 

Hoi. 

- Sha. 
Whi. 

- Brv. 



358 



275 
399 
261 



40 

115 

43 
847 
524 
.879 
896 
363 
358 
474 
222 
502 
333 

92 
2 
486 
134 
233 
475 
475 
443 
200 
161 
232 
252 
132 
76 
263 
385 
350 
319 
705 
70 
163 
282 
289 
409 
152 
803 
45 
348 



QQ*7 Ossian 

OOrf Oxir 

Our first citizen— Edward Everett - - Hoi. 268 

— first young love ----- Moore 658 

— free flag is dancing ----- Bry. 108 

— glory is our freedom ----- Ten. 474 

— God in heaven, from that holy place - Pro. 439 

— good old friend is gone, gone to his rest - Cow. 470 

— hands have met but not our hearts - - Hood 173 

— hearts, my love, were doomed to be - Moore 83 

— heavenly father, is but one - - - Wes. 226 

— hoste upon his stirrops stode anon - - Cha. 388 

— Indian summer ------ Hoi. 211 

— journey was not slackened by our talk Dante 203 

— lady of the Eocks," For — a sonnet - - Eos. 153 

— lady of the snow ------ Wor. 296 

— lady/swell Hem. 343 

— life is comely as a whole ... - Fa v. 239 

— life is hid with Christ in God - - - Her. 172 

— life is turned out of her course - - - Wor. 698 

— life is twofold : Sleep hath its own world Byron 203 

— limitations ------- Hoi. 105 

— Lombard country girls along the coast - Eos. 41 

— lord Muhammad lay upon the hill - P. of F. 50 

— lord the prophet (peace to him !) - P. of F. 96 

— lords are to the mountains gane - - Burns 335 

— love is not a fading earthly flower - - Low. 24 

— Master - Whi, 319 

— nation's foes lament on Fox's death - Byron 155 

— new heraldry is hands not hearts - - Sha. 897 

— noisy years seem moments - - - Wor. 500 

— oldest friend ------- Hoi. 220 

— only greatness is that we aspire - - Ing. 465 

— pathway leads but to a precipice - - Eog. 185 

— poet, who has taught the western breeze Hoi. 263 

— prince and friend enthroned above - - Wes. 270 

— remedies oft in ourselves - Sha. 256 

— rides in all directions bend - - - - Goe. 232 

— river (Merrimack.) ----- Whi. 280 

— ship lay tumbling in an angry sea - - Low. 383 

— state (Massachusetts) ----- Whi. 150 

— sweet autumnal western-scented wind - Flo. 115 

— sweet singer — J. A. - - - - - Hoi. 231 

— Thrissles flourished fresh and fair — a song Burns 226 

— titles -------- Pro. 398 

— vales are sweet with fern and rose - - Whi. 240 

— vicar still preaches that Peter and Poule Scott 152 

— vows are heard betimes I Dry. 258 

— walk was far among the ancient trees - Wor. 138 

— work is over — over now ..-.-- Scott 418 

— Yankee girls Hoi. 79 

— youth is like the dream of the hunter - - Oss. 280 



PaS" k6ePer 388 

Ouse-keeper sent tha my lass - - - Ten. 701 

Out and in the river is winding - - - Whi. 247 

— damned spot ! out, I say ! - Sha. 806 

— from Jerusalem ------ Whi 413 

— of heaven shall o'er you lean - - - Bro. 101 

— of my own great woe ----- Bro. 165 

— of the bosom of the air - Lon. 227 

— of the deep, my child ----- Ten. 719 

— of the eastern shadow of the earth - - She. 578 

— of this nettle danger ----- Sha. 389 

— out, brief candle Sha. 808 

— over the Forth — a song - Burns 259 
Outlandish proverbs ----- Her. 437 
Outstretching flameward his upbraided hand Wor. 369 
Over an ancient scroll I bent - Pro. 49 

— heart, The ------ - Whi. 237 

— his head the chafer hummeth - - - Ing. 518 

— his head were the maple buds - - - Erne. 240 

— his keys the musing organist - - - Low. 107 

— how many tracts vast, measureless - - Rog. 45 

— the dumb campagna sea - Bro. 617 

— the meadows and down the stream - - Goe. 230 

— the mountain ------ Pro. 215 

— the mountains, and under the waves - - Scott 439 

— the river. (Nancy A. W. Priest.) - - Fav. 128 

— the way ------- -Hood 339 

— the wooded northern ridge - Whi. 275 

— vale and torrent far ----- Goe. 58 

Overdone, Mistress, c. in Measure for Measure Sha. 67 

Overruled -------- Whi. 414 

Owlspiegle, c. in Doom of Devorgoil - - Scott 524 

Owl, The— a song ------ Ten. 11 

— To the - - - - - - - - Burns 125 

Ovid in exile ------- Lon. 387 

— Translations from - - - Cow. 548 ; Pope 429 
Owen, Epigrams translated from - - - Cow. 610 
Owen Glyndwr's war-song - Hem. 246 
Owre hoste sawh that the brighte sonne - - Cha. 149 

— ost gan swere as he were wood - - - Cha. 371 

— swete Lord God of heven --'-.- Cha. 505 
Oxenford, earl of, Sonnet to - - - - Spe. 2Q 
Oxford, Earl of, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - Sha. 526 

— Earl of, c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 556 

— earl of, Epistle to Pope 333 

— Spoken at — an epilogue - Dry. 521 

— university, To— a sonnet - Wor. 241 

— university, To — prologues - - - Dry. 484, 493, 498 

Oyster, The, and the poet Cow. 436 

Oysterman, Ballad of the ... - Hoi. 83 

Oysters, On receiving a barrel of Cow. 399 



389 Ouse-keeper 

Ozair, the Jew P. of F. 134 

Ozymandias — a sonnet ----- She. 406 

P.; J., To - - - - - - - - Whi. 108 

Pablo, c. in Spanish Gypsy - - Eliot 179 

Psean --------- Whi. 73 

Psestum, Lucania, Italy ----- Rog. 154 

Page, a gentleman of Windsor, c. in Merry W. Sha. 42 

— Anne, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - Sha. 42 

— Mistress, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - Sha. 42 

— William, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor Sha. 42 

— and miller's daughter — a ballad - - - Goe. 118 

— suy moy -------- Mer. 237 

Pageant, The ------ - Whi. 369 

Paget, Lord, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

Pain and sorrow shall vanish before us - Moore 650 

— For one in - - - - - - - Wes. 131 

— in a pleasure-boat - Hood 592 

— in pleasure — a sonnet ----- Bro. 86 

— my old companion, pain - Wes. 131 
Pained with her slighting Jamie's love - Burns 299 
Painless thou shalt attain the close of pain L. of A. 14 
Pains of sleep ------- Col. 209 

Painted cup, The - - - - - - . Bry. 196 

— tower of Tell at Altorf - Wor. 297 
Painter, Epigram to a - - Burns 176 

— this likeness is too strong - - - - Cow. 514 

— To a — a sonnet ------ Wor. 248 

Painting, Stanzas to Cam. 222 

Pairing time anticipated ----- Cow. 423 

Pakenham, General Sir Edward - - - Hem. 332 

Palace of art, The ----- - Ten. 37 

— roof of cloudless nights ! - - - She. 416 
Palsemon — a pastoral ------ Vir. 20 

Palafox ? ah, where is — a sonnet - - - Wor. 280 

Palamon and Arcite - - - - - - Dry. 325 

Palatine, The - - - - - . - - Whi. 310 

Pale broken flower !-.---- Moore 656 

— flower — pale, fragile, faded flower - - Flo. 329 

— roamer thro' the night ! — a sonnet - - Col. 93 
Palermo, Vespers of — a tragedy - - - Hem. 493 

Palestine - Whi. 82 

Palfrey, John G. Low. 102 

Paligenesis ----- - Lon. 317 ; Mer. 288 

Palinode — autumn ------ Low. 352 

Palladas— Spartan mother -"'-•'-- Cow. 513 

Pallas bathing, On Cow. 520 

— grew vaporish once, and odd - - - Pope 387 
Pallida materni Genii atque exanguis - - Her. 541 
Palm Sunday at the Vatican - Goe. 240 



Palm on a 

Parting oyu 

Palm tree, The - Hem. 418; Whi. 246 

Palmer, W. P. Butterfly in a crowded street Flo. 379 

Chrysanthemums ----- Flo. 287 

Last autumnal walk ----- Flo. 283 

Orange-tree, To an - - - - - Flo. 288 

— The - Scott 377 

Pan Erne. 309 

— Dead - - Bro. 104 

— Echo, and the satyr - She. 533 

— Hymn of- ------- She. 425 

Pancho, alguacil, c. in Spanish Student - Lon. 44 

Pandarus, Daughters of Bro. 179 

— uncle of Cressida, c. in Troilus and Cressida Sha. 622 
Pandora, c. in Masque of Pandora - - - Lon. 341 

— a sonnet ------- R s. 161 

— Masque of — a play ------ Lon. 341 

Pandulph, Cardinal, c. in King John - - Sha. 332 

Pang more sharp than all Col. 205 

Panorama, The ------ Whi. 175 

Pansies. (R. Buchanan.) ----- Flo. 80 

— lilies, kingcups, daisies - - Wor. 147 ; Flo. 138 
Pansy, Origin of name of - - - - - Flo. 79 

— See also Heart's-ease. 

Panthalis, c. in Faust - Faust 170 

Panthea, c. in Prometheus Unbound - - She. 219 

Panthino, c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - Sha. 21 

Pantomime, At the ------ Hoi. 245 

Papal abuses — a sonnet ----- Wor. 362 

— dominion — a sonnet ----- Wor. 362 
Papilio et Limax. (Fable of Gay.) - - - Cow. 649 
Parable — I picked a rustic nosegay - - Goe. 235 
Parables ----- Goe. 228; Low. 19, 96 

— and riddles ------- Sch. 193 

Paradise ----- Dante 242 ; Her. 222 

— and the peri ------ Moore 413 

— bird, The - Mer. 29 

— lost - - Mil. 15 

— lost, A simile from ------ Cow. 598 

— of tears, The Bry. 156 

— regained - Mil. 292 

Paradox, A ------ - Her. 308 

Parallel, The - Moore 262 ; Sch. 304 

Paraphrase from Monk of St. Gall - - Mac. 203 

— on Anacreon - Bro. 180 

— on Euripides .----, Bro. 176 

— on Hesiod - - Bro. 176 

— on Theocritus ------ Bro. 166 

Paraphrases on Apuleius - - - - - Bro. 169 

— on Heine - - - - - - - Bro. 165 

— on Homer ------- Bro. 177 



391 



Palm 
Parting 



Paraphrases on Nonnus ----- Bro. 173 

— the Psalms - Burns 38 ; Byron 264 

— the Psalms ----- Mil. 483 ; Tho. 380 

— the Psalms - - - - Wes. 185, 215, 283, 365 
Pardon, goddess of the night - - - Sha. 132 

— Lord, the lips that dare - Whi. 281 

— Oh, pardon, that my soul - Bro. 162 
Pardoner, The - - - - - - P. of F. 80 

Pardoneres tale, The - Cha. 376 

Parent of golden dreams, romance - - Byron 158 

— of good whose plenteous grace - - - Wes. 81 
Parental ode to my son ----- Hood 395 

Parentalia - - Her. 536 

Parenthetical address - ' '- Byron 250 

Parere fati discite legibus ,.--■-". Mil. 534 

Pariah's prayer, The— a ballad - - - - Goe. 142 

Paris, Antiques at ----- Sch. 229 

— Governor of, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - Sha. 469 

— son of Priam, c. in Troilus and Cressida Sha. 622 

— c. in Eomeo and Juliet - - Sha. 712 
Parish clerk, The - - - - Cra. 440 

— register, The - - - - - Cra. 260 

Parisina - - Byron 76 

Park, The - Erne. 78 

Parker Cleaveland — a sonnet - - - Lon. 381 
Parker, H. W. Elm Sylph, The - - - Flo. 498 
To a Flower - Flo. 330 

— Hugh, Epistle to - Burns 168 

— Sir Peter, On death of Byron 258 
Parks and ponds are good by day - - - Erne. 283 

Parnassus, German Goe. 183 

Parnell, Dr., Epitaph on ----- Gol. 137 

Parody, A ------- Her. 287 

— of a celebrated letter - Moore 322 
Parolles, c. in All's Well that Ends Well - Sha. 254 
Parrhasius -------- Wil. 195 

Parrot and wren - - - - - - Wor. 151 

— The - - - - - - - - Cam. 305 

Parsi Nameh. (Divan, xi.) - Goe. 383 

Parson, these things in thy possessing - - Pope 449 

— Turell's legacy ------ Hoi. 174 

Parsonage, The. (Excursion.) - - - - Wor. 690 

— in Oxfordshire— a sonnet - - - - Wor. 242 
Parsons, Thomas W. Bust of Dante - - Fav. 446 

— looks, The — an epigram - Burns 183 
Part fenced by man, part by a rugged steep - Wor. 383 
Parted love — a sonnet ----- Ros. 249 

— presence -------- Ros. 284 

Parthian glance, A - - - - - - Hood 557 

Parting ----- Byron 245 ; Pro. 157 



Parting QQ9 

Peace oy ^ 

Parting, Elegy on Tho. 393 

— health of J. L. Motley - Hoi. 164 

— hour, The Cra. 12 

— hymn -------- Hoi. 156 

— lovers. (Sienna.) ----- Bro. 618 

— of Launcelot and Guinever, The - - - Mer. 434 

— of summer - - Hem. 344 

— of the ways ------- Low. 342 

— song, The, Alumni festival, 1857 - - Hoi. 148 

— word, The ------- Hoi. 46 

— words -------- Hem. 228 

Partington, Mrs." (pseud.). See Shillaber, B. P. 

Parvenu, The — an epigram - - - - Burns 184 

Parvum piamque dum lubenter semitam - Her. 542 

Pass a few swiftly fleeting years - - - Wes. 259 

— of Killicrankie — a sonnet - Wor. 260 

— of Kirkstone Wor. 195 

— of the Sierra Whi. 212 

Passage of the Apennines - - - - She. 410 

Passages of Scripture, Hymns on - Wes. 231 

Passaic, Falls of the. (Washington Irving.) Flo. 486 

Passing of Arthur, The ----- Ten. 433 

Passion and worship — a sonnet - Eos. 231 

— brings reason — who can pacify - - - Goe. 205 

— flower, Poesy of the - - - - - Flo. 199 

— flower, The (anon.) ----- Flo. 201 

— flower, To the. (Barton.)- - - - Flo. 200 

— The - - - - - - - - - Mil. 412 

Passionate pilgrim, The - - - - - Sha. 1050 

Passover in the holy family — a sonnet - - Eos. 156 

Past and future — a sonnet - Bro. 82 

— and present ------- Pro. 343 

— our dancing days ----- gha. 718 

— The - - - - Bry. 121; Erne. 221; She. 411 

— To the - - - Low. 64 

Paston, Margaret, Epitaph on - - - - Dry. 319 

Pastor and patriot ! — at whose bidding - Wor. 399 

— The. (Excursion.) ----- Wor. 649 
Pastoral betwixt David, Thirsis and Angel 

Gabriel ------- Tho. 453 

— character — a sonnet ----- Wor. 375 

— "Come Anna" - - - - - White 335 

— eclogue on death of Sir Philip Sidney - Spe. 636 

— entertainment ------ Tho. 457 

— letter, The - Whi. 53 

— poetry, Discourse on Pope 22 

— poetry, On - Burns 143 

Pastorals. (Dry den.) ----- Vir. 13 

Pastorius, Francis Daniel - - Whi. 358 

Patch grief with proverbs ----- Sha. 129 



393 SKS* 

Path of independence (anon.) - - - Fav. 286 

— The --------- Bry. 308 

Patience and sorrow strove - - - - Sha. 869 

— accomplish thy labor ----- Lon. 108 

— on a monument smiling at grief - - Sha. 289 

— Prayer for ------- Cow. 80 

— waits the destined day - Scott 249 
Patience, c. in Henry viii. _:_•__ Sha. 592 
Patient is Allah and he loveth well - - P. of F. 190 

— The - - - - - - - - P. of F. 190 

Patiently received from Thee - - - Wes. 280 

Patison, Mr., Letter to - Burns 375 

Patriotic sympathies— a sonnet - - - Wor. 372 

Patriots informed with Apostolic light - - Wor. 375 

Patroclus, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - Sha. 622 

— Death of ------- Iliad 333 

— Games in honor of Iliad 451 
Patron of all those luckless brains - - - Cow. 429 

— The - - - - - - - - Cra. 43 

Patterson. To the crocus ----- Flo. 32 

Pau-Puk-Keewis ------ Lon. 176 

Paul Eevere's ride ------ Lon. 235 

Paulina, c. in The Winter's Tale - - - Sha. 304 

Pauline - - - - - - - - Hem. 186 

Paulinus — a sonnet ----- Wor. 357 

Paulo post futuri — an epigram - - - Groe. 226 

Pause, courteous spirit ! Balbi supplicates Wor. 488 

— here and think : a monitory rhyme - - Cow. 507 

— traveler ! an inscription - Wor. 468 
Pawning my watch, On ----- Hood 456 
Payson, Edward, Death of - Wil. 298 
Peace - - Her. 213; Fav. 332 

— after a storm - Cow. 78 

— and glory ------ Moore 123 

— autumn, The Whi. 317 

— be around thee Moore 526 

— be to this habitation Wes. 101 

— Celebration of - Hood 354 

— convention at Brussels, The - - - Whi. 149 

— nattering bishop ! lying dean ! - - - Pope 387 

— go with thee and comfort all thy days L. of A. 108 

— has unveiled her smiling face - - - Cow. 631 

— In- - - - Whi. 162 

— in her chamber, wheresoever - - - Eos. 145 

— is but a phantom of the brain - - - Hem. 280 

— jubilee, 1869, Hymn for - Hoi. 290 

— muttering thoughts ! and do not grudge Her. 152 

— Ode to Cow. 415; Hood 459 

— o'er the world her olive wand extend - Pope 87 

— of Europe, The Whi. 161 



Peace QQ/L 

Pestalutz oy ~± 

Peace of God, The - Pro. 167 

— of Paradise - P. of F. 24 

— peace, peace, do you say? - Bro. 608 

— pipe, The- ------- Lon. 142 

— prattler do not lour Her. 196 

— Song on ------- Cow. 416 

— The - P. of F. 24 

— To -------- Tho. 470 

— to the broken-hearted dead ! - - - Wil. 232 

— to the slumberers ----- Moore 531 

— to thee, isle of the ocean ! - - - - Byron 240 

— to thy dreams ! thou art slumbering now - Hem. 367 
Pearl, Origin of the ----- Goe. 381 

— The - - - - Her. 177 

Pearls of the faith. (Islamism.) - - -P. of F. 1 

Peasant girl of the Ehone ----- Hem. 180 

Peasants, The ------ Sch. 326 

Pease blossom, a fairy, c. in Midsummer- 
night's Dream ----- Sha. 161 

Pedant, A, c. in The Taming of the Shrew - Sha. 229 

Peddler, The ------ - Mer. 265 

Pedigree, On, from Epicharmus - - - Cow. 522 

Pedro Crespo, c. in Spanish Student - - Lon. 44 

Peele castle, Picture of Wor. 490 

Peers, New creation of - - - - - Moore 625 

Peg Nicholson, Elegy on - - - - Burns 127 

Pegasus in harness ------- Sch. 277 

— in pound - Lon. 133 

Peggy — a song ------ Burns 194 

Pelion and Ossa nourish side by side— a sonnet Wor. 227 

Pelleas and Ettarre ----- Ten. 422 

Pembroke, countess of, Sonnet to - Spe. 28 

— Earl of, c. in King John - - - - Sha. 332 

— — c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - - - Sha. 526 

Penelope, for her Ulysses' sake - - - Spe. 691 

Penitence of Krishna - - * - I. S. S. 24 

Penitential ------- Wes. 314 

Pentecost, day of rejoicing, had come - - Lon. 29 

Pennacook, Bridal of Whi. 15 

Pennsylvania pilgrim, The - - > - - Whi. 358 

— To -------- Whi. 212 

Pennsylvanians, To the— a sonnet - - - Wor. 440 

Pensive at eve — a sonnet ... - Col. 99 

Pentucket ----- . Whi. 34 

Penumbra ------- Ros. 149 

People of England — a fragment - - - She. 505 

— your chains are severing link by link - Wor. 438 
Pepita, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 211 
Per Certo i bei vost'r occhi - - Mil. 473 

— pacem ad lucem Pro. 430 



o q k Peace 

oyj Pestalutz 

Per post, sir, we send your MS. - - - Moore 313 

— strages licet auctorum veterumque ruinam Her. 586 
Perad venture of old, some bard - - - Lon. 409 
Perchance, on earth, I shall not see thee ever Mer. 285 
Perched upon a bust of Pallas - - - Poe 53 
Percival, James G. Lily, The - - - Flo. 74, 388 

May ------- Flo. 438 

Morning among the hills - - - - Fav. 87 

Eemembrance Fav. 235 

Percy. Wearing the willow - Flo. 142 

— a noble, c. in Halidon Hill - - - Scott 462 

— Henry (Hotspur), c. in Eichard iii. - - Sha. 356 

— Henry (Hotspur), c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - Sha. 382 

— Henry, earl of Northumberland, c. in Henry 

iv., pt. 1 ------ Sha. 382 

— Lady, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 382 

— Thomas, earl of Worcester, c. in Henry iv., 

pt. 1 ------- - Sha. 382 

Perdita, c. in The Winter's Tale - - - Sha. 304 

— To, singing ------- Low. 8 

Perfect sacrifice, The. (Mme. G-uyon.) - Cow. 632 

Perfection, On ------ - Wes. 166 

Perfida, crudelis, victor et lymphata furore Cow. 478 

Perfumed from an unseen censer - - - Poe 56 

Perhaps it may turn out a sang - - - Burns 164 

— some needful service of the state - - Wor. 486 

— the parson stretched a point too far - Dry. 525 

— too far in these considerate days - - Hoi. 103 
Pericles— a tragedy ----- Sha. 977 

Perirrhanterium Her. 89 

Periwinkle, Poesy of the ... - Flo. 155 

Periwinkles and the locusts - Moore 640 

Perpetual fountain of domestic sweets - Mil. 102 

Perplexed and troubled at his bad success - Mil. 332 

— music — a sonnet ------ Bro. 84 

Perry, Ode to Hood 346 

Persecuted, For the ----- Wes. 24 

Persecution — a sonnet ----- Wor. 355 

— of the Covenanters — a sonnet - - - Wor. 373 

Persephone Ing. 138; Flo. 35 

Perseverance ------- Wes. 198 

Persian poem — The Divan - - Goe. 362 

Personal poems ------ Lon. 413 

— talk Wor. 418 

Persones tale, The ------ Cha. 505 

Persuasion — a sonnet ----- Wor. 357 

Peru, Damsel of - Bry. 100 

Perugia, From ------- Whi. 258 

Perverts the prophets and the psalms - - Byron 181 

Pestalutz, c. in Zapolya ----- Col. 250 



Pet 
Pilgrim 



396 



Pet lamb, The— a pastoral - Wor. 86 

— name, The ------- Bro. 78 

Peter, c. in House of Aspen - Scott 562 

— a friar, c. in Measure for Measure - - Sha. 67 

— Bell— a tale ------- Wor. 214 

— Bell the third - ------ She. 303 

— Bells, one, two and three - - - - She. 304 
Peter, First epistle to, On passages in - - Wes. 306 

— Grimes ------- Cra. 461 

— Martyr, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

— of Pomfret, c. in King John - - - Sha. 332 
Peter, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - Sha. 496 

— c. in Eomeo and Juliet - Sha. 712 
Peters, a gentleman, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 

Peter's field - Erne. 302 

Petition — a song ------ Qoe. 64 

— for an absolute retreat. (Countess of Win- 

chelsea.) Flo. 390 

— The -------- Moore 631 

Peto, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - - - Sha. 382 

Petrarch, Visions of Spe. 685 
Petre, Lord, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 
Petruchio, c. in The Taming of the Shrew - Sha. 229 
Phantasm of Jupiter, c. in Prometheus Un- 
bound - - She. 219 

Phantasy to Laura Sch. 22 

Phantom or fact? - Col. 212 

— ship, The Lon. 212 

Phantoms Pro. 160 

Pharmaceutria — a pastoral - Vir. 42 

Pharos loquitur - Scott 388 

Pheasants, Thanks for a gift of Cow. 493 

Phebe, a shepherdess, c. in As You Like It Sha. 205 

Phi Beta Kappa, June, 1873 - Hoi. 288 

society, For ------ Hoi. 38 

Philadelphia, On leaving - Moore 170 

Philario, c. in Cymbeline - - Sha. 944 

Philemon, c. in Faust - Faust 170 

— c. in Pericles ------ Sha. 977 

Philip, c. in Judas Maccaba?us - - - Lon. 334 

— king of France, c. in King John - - Sha. 332 

— king of Spain, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

— the Bastard, c. in King John - - - Sha. 332 

— and MUdred ------ p r0 . 267 

Philip Van Artevelde — a dramatic romance Tay. 31 

Philippians, On passages in Epistle to Wes. 168, 355 

Phillips, Wendell — a sonnet - Low. 24 

Phillis the fair— a song ----- Burns 254 

— To ------- Moore 78 

Philo, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 



QQ7 Pet 

OVi Pilgrim 

Philosopher - Erne. 314 

— to his love, The Hoi. 80 

Philosophers have measured mountains - - Her. 118 

— The - Sch. 267, 275 

Philosophy of composition — an essay - - Poe 171 

Philosophical egotist ----- Sen. 241 

Philostrate, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha, 161 

Philotus, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 

Phocian, c. in Clytemnestra - Mer. 348 

Phoebus and Hermes — an antique - - Goe. 272 

— sitting one day in a laurel-tree's shade - Low. 119 
Phoenix and the turtle, The - - - - Sha. 1054 
Phrases in flower-language - - Flo. 213 
Phryne — an imitation ----- Pope 449 
Phrynia, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 
Physic. (Professions.) ----- Cra. 359 
Physician, friend of human kind - - - Wes. 98 
Physician's hymn, The ----- Wes. 98 
Piatt, Sarah M. B. Question of the hour - Fav. 436 
Pibroch of Donald Dhu ----- Scott 400 
Piccolomini, The — a drama and tragedy Col. 407, 557 
Pickersgill, Miss. Bride of the Danube - Flo. 87 
Picket before Bull Eun. (J. W. Day.) - - Fav. 229 
Picture, A. (Shillaber.) - Fav. 287 

— of a girl, On a ------ Cam. 267 

— The, or the lover's resolution - - - Col. 152 

— writing - - Lon. 172 

— Written beneath a - - - - - Byron 244 
Pictured in memory's mellowing glass - White 236 
Pictures -------- Whi. 163 

— from Appledore ------ Low. 347 

— from occasional poems - Hoi. 99 

— in the fire ------- p r0 . 177 

— Sonnets for Eos. 153, 293 

Pierce of Exton, Sir, c. in Eichard ii. - - Sha. 356 

Piero Luca, known of all the town - - Whi. 303 

Pierpont, John. Music of nature - - - Fav. 22 

Two hundred years - Fav. 133 

Piety, Decay of — a sonnet - Wor. 230 

Pigna, a minister, c. in Tasso - - - She. 457 

Pigot, J. M. B. , Eeply to verses of - - Byron 156 

Pileo quadrato, De ----- - Her. 566 

Pilewort, To the (celandine) - Wor. 147 

Pilgrim fathers, Landing of the - - - Hem. 416 

— fathers, The — a sonnet ----- Wor. 374 
Pilgrim of Glencoe, The ... - Cam. 280 
Pilgrim ! O say, hath thy cheek been fanned Hem. 384 

— The Eog. 94 ; Sch. 108 

— The — an epilogue Dry. 525 

— The, Prologue to* Dry. 509 



Pilgrimage 393 

Pilgrimage, The Her. 239 

Pilgrim's death, The Wor. 153 

— The - - - - Pro. 113 

— vision, The Hoi. 27 

Pillar of Trajan, The ------ Wor. 320 

Pimpernel. (Holmes.) ----- Flo. 77 

— Poesy of the ------ Mo. 76 

Pinch, c. in Comedy of Errors - - - - Sha. 93 

Pinckney's resolutions, On the adoption of - Whi. 75 

Pindarus, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 

Pine of Monte Mario at Eome — a sonnet - Wor. 312 

— tree, The -------- Whi. 68 

— tree, To a - - - - - - Low. 63 

Pineapple and the bee, The - Cow. 388 

Pinkney, Edward C. A health - Poe35;Fav. 184 

Evergreens ------- Flo. 326 

Pio Nono, Dream of Whi. 189 

Pioneer, The ------- Low. 91 

Pious editor's creed. (Biglow papers.) - Low. 187 

Piper, The — fragment of a song - - Burns 269 

Pipes at Lucknow, The ----- Whi. 241 

— of the misty moorlands ----- Whi. 241 
Pire, Christine. I give to thee the autumn rose Flo. 10 
Pisanio, c. in Cymbeline ----- Sha. 944 
Piscataqua, Truce of Whi. 231 
Pistol, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - Sha. 409 

— c. in Henry v. ----- - Sha. 439 

— a sharper, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - Sha. 42 
Pitcairn's island, Song of Bry. 85 
Piteous sobs that choke— a sonnet - - - Col. 99 
Pitt, William, Letter to - - - - - Burns 507 

To memory of ----- - Mac. 149 

Pitt club, Song for the - Scott 387 

Pittsfield cemetery, Dedication of - Hoi. 123 

Pity and need make all flesh kin - - L. of A. 101 

— for He is pitiful ;— a king - - - P. of F. 151 

— for poor Africans ----- Cow. 449 

— makes the world soft to the weak - L. of A. 93 

— of Park fountain - - - Wil. 258; Fav. 192 

— says the Theban bard ----- Cow. 522 

Pius ninth, To ------ Whi. 145 

Pixies, Songs of the ------ Col. 29 

Place de la Bastille, Paris — a sonnet - - Eos. 301 

— me once more, my daughter, where the sun Ayt. 159 

— the white man on Afric's coast - - Cra. 515 

— your hands in mine, dear - Pro. 218 
Places of worship — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 375 

— Poems on naming of Wor. 136 
Plague on't, an I thought he had been valiant Sha. 296 

— The - - Sch. 321 



399 

Plague's contagious murderous breath 
Plain, as her native dignity of mind 

— direction, A - 

— of Badajos, The ----- 

— of Donnerdale — a sonnet - 
Plaintif e to fortune ----- 
Plan the muses entertained - - - - 
Plangimus fortes. Periere fortes - 
Plantagenet, Edward, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 

— Margaret, c. in Richard iii. - 

— Richard, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - 
Plantains the golden and the green - 
Planting of the apple-tree -..--- 
Plants, Metamorphosis of - 

Plateea, Tombs of ----- - 

Plato, From— To Stella - 

— Spirit of — an epigram -'"--- 
Platonic friendship at your years - 

— idea of Aristotle. (Milton.) 
Plautus, Translation from 

Play, fair child, in thy mother's lap ! - 

— out the play ------ 

Players -------- 

Playing at priests ----- 

— child -------- 

— on the virginals ----- 
PLAYS: 



Pilgrimage 
Plays 

Sch. 321 

- Scott 417 
Hood 398 

- Scott 384 
Wor. 331 

- Cha. 597 
Goe. 236 

- Cow. 415 

Ska. 496 

- Ska. 556 
Ska. 469 

Moore 475 

Bry. 222 

- Goe. 257 
Hem. 317 

- Ske. 533 
Ske. 533 

- Cam. 263 
Cow. 578 

- Mac. 212 
Sck. 232 

- Ska. 395 
Cra. 394 

- Goe. 233 
Sck. 232 

- Ing. 39 



All's Well that Ends Well . Sha. 

Antony and Cleopatra . " 

Armgart .... Eliot 

As You Like It . . Sha. 

Auchindrane — a tragedy . Scott 

Borderers, The— a tragedy Wor. 

Cain— a mystery . . Byron 

Cenci, The . . . She. 

Charles the First — a frag- 
ment . . . She. 

Clytemnestra . . . Mer. 

Comala .... Oss. 

Comedy of Errors . . Sha. 

Comus .... Mil. 

Coriolanus .... Sha. 

Cyclops, The — a satyric 

drama . . . She. 

Cymbeline . . . Sha. 

Doom of Devorgoil . . Scott 

Drama of Exile . . Bro. 

Fall of Robespierre, The . Col. 

Faust (Goethe), Scenes from She. 

Good-natured Man, The . Gol. 

Halidon Hill . . . Scott 



Hamlet . . . . 
Harold 

Hellas— a lyric drama 
Henry iv., part 1 
Henry iv., part 2 . 
Henry v. . . . 
Henry vi., part 1 . 
Henry vi., part 2 



Sha. 
Ten. 
She. 
Sha. 



254 
911 
30 
205 
489 

104 

208 

482 

348 
203 
93 
433 
054 

523 
944 
523 
182 
882 
540 
177 
402 
811 
015 
375 
382 
40!) 
430 
400 
4'JO 



Sha. 



Scott 
Lon. 
Sha. 



Henry vi., part 3 . 
Henry viii. 
House of Aspen . 
Judas Maccabaaus . 
Julius Caesar 
King John ..." 
King Lear . . . " 

King Stephen— a fragment Keats 
Love's Labor's Lost . . Sha. 
Macbeth .... " 
MacDuff 's Cross . . . Scott 
Magico Prodigioso (Calde- 

ron), Scenes from . She. 
Manfred, a dramatic poem Byron 
Measure for Measure . . Sha. 
Merchant of Venice . " 
Merry Wives of Windsor . " 
Michelangelo . . . Lon. 
Midsummer-night's Dream Sha. 
Much Ado about Nothing 
GEdipus Tyrannus,a tragedy She. 
Othello .... Sha. 
Otho the Great— a tragedy Keats 



Pericles 
Philip Van Artevelde . 
Piccolomini, The 
Politian, Scenes from . 
Prometheus Bound . 
Prometheus Unbound 
Queen Mary 
Remorse— a tragedy . 
Richard ii. 



Sha. 
Tay. 

Col. 

Poe 
Bro. 
She. 
Ten. 

Col. 
Sha. 



526 

592 
561 
324 
764 
332 
847 
408 
135 
788 
483 

537 
87 
67 
181 
42 
415 
161 
111 
323 
879 
333 
977 
31 
407 
108 
115 
217 
537 
311 
35'J 



Plays 
Poets 




400 


Richard Mi. . . 


. Sha. 


556 


Timon of Athens . . . Sha. 


Romeo and Juliet . 


" 


712 


Titus Andronicus . . " 


Samson Agonistes 


. Mil. 


3*9 


Troilus and Cressida . . " . 


Semele, in two scenes 


Sch. 


57 


Twelfth Night ..." 


She Stoops to Conquer 


. Gol. 


269 


Two Gentlemen of "Verona " 


Siege of Valencia . 


Hem. 


433 


Vespers of Palermo . Hem. 
Wallenstein, Death of— a 


Spanish Gypsy . 


. Eliot 


141 


Spanish Student 


Lon. 


44 


tragedy . . . Col. 
Winters Tale . . . Sha. 


Taming of the Shrew . 


. Sha. 


229 


Tempest . 




1 


Zapolya .... Col. 



Plays round the head but comes not to the - Pope 

— such fantastic tricks ----- Sha. 
Plea for authors — a sonnet - Wor. 

— for the historian — a sonnet - - - Wor. 

— of the midsummer fairies ----.- Hood 

Pleading for youth ------ Cow. 

Pleasant beneath this burning sky of June - Flo. 

— is the voice of thy song - - Oss. 

— it was, when woods were green - - - Lon. 
Please to ring the belle - - - - - Hood 
Pleased to the last, he crops the flowery - - Pope 
Pleasing punishment that women - - Sha. 
Pleasure, Pain in — a sonnet - Bro. 

— that comes unlooked for, is thrice welcome Rog. 
Pleasures newly found are sweet - Wor. 

— of heaven. (Ben Jonson.) - - - Fav. 

— of hope Cam. 35 ; Fav. 

— of memory - - Eog. 

— of memory. (More.) ----- Fav. 

Pledge to the much loved land that gave us Cam. 
Plenty is from, and with the Lord - - - Wes. 
Plighted promise ------ R s. 

Plowman homeward plods his weary way - Fav. 

— The - Burns 216; Hoi. 
Plumb tre, J., Letter to - White 
Pluck out the heart of my mystery - - Sha. 
Pluck up drowned honor by the locks - - Sha. 
Plymouth church, St. Paul, For opening of Whi. 
Poacher, The ------ Scott 

Poco-curante society, Song for - - - Moore 
POE, EDGAR ALLAN, Poems of: 

131 Dreamland 

170 — within a Dream . 
64 Eldorado 

101 Enigma— a sonnet . 

44 Epithalamium .... 

60 Essays: Philosophy of Composi- 
106 tion 

41 — Poetic Principle . 

86 — Power of Words, The . 

70 Eulalie 

F , To 

171 Fairlnes. (Hood.) 

82 ! Fairy-land 

31 | Haunted Palace. The . 

164 Health. (E. C. Finckney.) 

166 I Helen, To - . . . .72, 



Al Aaraaf 

Alone 

Annabel Lee 

Annie, For .... 

Augusta, Stanzas to. (Byron.) 

Bells, The .... 

Bridge Ballad 

Bridge of Sighs. (Hood.) 

City in the Sea 

Coliseum, The . 

Composition, Philosophy 

an essay . 
Conqueror, Worm, The 
Day is Done. The. (Longfellow.) 
Dead, Spirits of the . 
Dream, A . 



of- 



741 
688 
622 



557 
304 

230 

217 

74 
249 
313 

15 

67 
125 
254 

1 

520 

189 

93 

86 

97 

148 

327 

157 

254 

178 

172 

2Q2 

146 

30 

97 

172 

830 

386 

394 

382 

606 

94 



79 

106 

171 
19 

190 
97 

105 
39 

160 



401 



Plays 
Poets 



Hymn— "At morn— at noon" . 78 
Indian Serenade. (Shelley.) . 23 

Israfel 99 

June. (Bryant.) .... 33 

Lake, The 167 

Lenore ... . . 58 

Memoir of Edgar Allan Poe . 7 
Mother, To my — a sonnet . . 77 
Motherwell. Song of the Cavalier 49 
One in Paradise, To ... 84 
Osgood, Frances S., Epigram to 85 

Valentine to 76 

Philosophy of Composition— an 

essay 171 

Pinckney, Edward Coate,' 1 Health" 35 
Poetic Principle, The— an essay . 19 
"Politian," Scenes from . . 108 
Power of Words— an essay . . 190 
Princess, The, Extract from. 

(Tennyson.) . . . .46 

Eaven, The 51 

— Author's analysis of . . .180 



River— To the .... 

Romance 

Science, Sonnet to 
Silence— a sonnet .... 
Sleeper, The 

Song— I saw thee on the bridal 
day 

— of the Cavalier. (Motherwell.) 
Sonnets: Enigma, An . 

— Mother, To my 

— Science, To . 

— Silence 

— Zante. To . 
Spirits of the Dead 
Tamerlane 

To . 

Ulalume . 

Unseen Spirits. (Willis.) . 
Valentine to F. S. Osgood 
Valley of Unrest, The 
Words, Power of —an essay 
Zante, To . 



74, 107, 



149 
163 
130 



16? 
49 
70 

130 



164 
ISO 

165 
66 
24 
76 
91 

190 



Poe, Edgar Allan. Bells, The - Fav. 388 

Poetic principle — an extract - - Fav. 15 

Raven, The ------ Fav. 172 

Memoir of ----- - Poe 7 

Poem served to order, A - - - - - Hoi. 288 

Poesy. (O. W. Holmes.) - Fav. 322 

Poet and caged turtle-dove - Wor. 154 

— and his songs, The. (L'Envoi.) - - Lon. 401 

— and the bird, The ----- - Bro. 288 

— at breakfast-table, Poems from - - Hoi. 185 

— dreamt of heaven (anon.) - Fav. 143 

— I come to touch thy lance with mine - Lon. 385 

— in his youth and the cuckoo bird - - Ing. 218 

— of nature, thou hast wept to know - - She. 397 

— oyster and sensitive-plant, The - - - Cow. 436 

— The - - - - Bry. 306; Erne. 253; Ten. 16 

— The— an extract. (Scott.) - Fav. 291 

— who died of want, To a. (L. Filmore.) Fav. 137 
Poetic aphorisms - Lon. 93 

— justice, with her lifted scale - - - Pope 123 

— principle, The — an essay - Poe 19 
Poetry — a metrical essay - Hoi. 13 

— a parable - - - Goe. 235 

— of flowers. See Flowers. 

— of life ------- Sch. 281 

Poets and prophets - - - - - - P. of F. 110 

— attempt the noblest task they can - - Cow. 476 

— calendar, The ------ Lon. 403 

— dream, The — a sequel Wor. 90 

— epitaph, A ----- Wor. 415 

— like disputants, when reasons fail - - Dry. 516 

— like lawful monarchs ruled the stage - Dry. 496 

— lot, The _ . Hoi. 81 

— mind, The ------- Ten. 17 

26 



|£S* 402 

Poet's new-year's gift, The - - - - Cow. 446 

— portion, The - Hood 174 

— song, The ------ Ten. 118 

— The — a sonnet Lon. 381 

— tale, The ------ Lon. 268, 283, 294 

— Vision of ------ - Bro. 244 

— vow, The ------- Bro. 25 

— your subjects, have their parts assigned Dry. 484 
Poins, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - - - Sha. 382 
Point at issue, The — a sonnet - Wor. 368 

Pointer, Epitaph on a Cow. 493 

Poland, Lines on ----- - Cam. 235 

Polemic hymns of Charles Wesley - - - Wes. 159 

Policy of concealing our wants — an essay - G-ol. 390 

Polish insurrection. On the - Ten. 481 

Politian," Scenes from ----- Poe 108 

Political Georgics ------ Mac. 189 

— greatness — a sonnet ----- She. 439 

Politics -------- Erne. 230 

Polixenes, c. in Winter's Tale - - - Sha. 304 

Pollio— a pastoral - Vir. 26 

Pollok, Eobert. Happiness - Fav. 269 

Polonius, c. in Hamlet ----- Sha. 811 

Polwart on the green," Remarks on - - Burns 315 

Polycrates, Ring of ----- Sch. 138 

Polydore (Gruiderus), c. in Cymbeline - - Sha. 944 

Polyhymnia. (Tears of the Muses.) - - Spe. 588 

Pomp and circumstances of glorious war - Sha. 896 

Pompeii and Herculaneum -. Sch. 225 

Pompeius Sextus, c. in Antony and Cleopatra Sha. 911 

Pompey, c. in Measure for Measure - - - Sha. 67 

Pompey's ghost Hood 461 

Poor and content is rich Sha. 894 

— and honest lodger — a song - Burns 251 

— and inadequate the shadow-play - - - Whi. 416 

— and their dwellings, The - - - - Cra. 431 

— conquered monarch ! though that haughty Hoi. 75 

— For the ------- Cow. 86 

— in youth, and in life's later scenes - - Cow. 516 

— little foal of an oppressed race ! - - Col. 42 

— naked wretches, wheresoe'er you - - Sha. 863 

— nation, whose sweet sap and juice - - Her. 251 

— of the borough, The ----- Cra. 440 

— Robin -------- Wor. 452 

— silly soul, whose hope and head he low - Her. 171 

— sinner, A ------ - Wes. 361 

— soul, the center of my sinful earth — a sonnet Sha. 1045 

— Susan, Reverie of Wor. 172 

— Vestris, grieved beyond all measure - - Cow. 398 

— voter on election day ----- Whi. 170 



403 



Poet's 
Pope 



Poor wounded heart - 

POPE, ALEXANDER, Poems of: 



Moore 656 



109 



2.53 



Abelard, Eloisa to . 
Addison, Joseph, Epistle to 

Prologue to his " Cato " 

Alexis, or Summer 
Appendix— letter to Publisher 
Arbuthnot, Dr., Epistle to . 

Argus 

Artemisia — an imitation 
Atterbury, Francis, Epitaph on 
Augustus Caesar, Epistle to . 
Author of " Successio," To the 
Autumn, or Hylas and iEgon . 
Balance of Europe— an epigram 
Basset-table— a town eclogue . 
Bathurst, Lord, Epistle to 
Blount, Martha, on her birthday 

— Teresa, Epistles to . . 33' 
Boileau, Verbatim from 
Bolton, Dr., To 
Boyle, Richard, Epistle to . 
" Brutus," Tragedy of, Choruses to 355 
Buckingham, Duke of, In reply to 375 
Burlington, Countess of, On . . 387 
Butler, Samuel, Epitaph on . 350 
" Cato " of Addison, Prologue to 92 
Certain Ladies, On 395 

— Lady at Court, On a . . .369 
Challenge, The . . . . 378 
Charles, Earl of Dorset, Epitaph on 312 
Chiswick, Old gate at . 389 
Chorus of Youths and Virgins 
Choruses to Tragedy of " Brutus ' 
Coningsby, Lord, Epitaph on 
Corbet, Mrs., Epitaph on . 
Cowley, Abraham, Imitation of 
Craggs, James, Epistle to . 

Epitaph on 

Poem to ... 

Criticism, Essay on 
Cromwell, Henry, To . 



355 
349 
345 
444 



Damon, or Spring 
Daphne, or winter 
Digby, Robert and Mary, Epitaph 

on 345 

Donne, John, Satires of . . 496 
Dorset, Earl of, Imitations of . 448 
Drew, Sarah, Epitaphs on . . 386 
Dunciad, The . . 118 

Durastanti, Sung by 374 

D'Urfey's Last Play, Prologue for 370 
Dying Christian to his soul . . 339 
Edmund, Duke of Buckingham, 

Epitaph on . . . .318 
Elegy to an Unfortunate Lady . 90 
Eloisa to Abelard . . . .109 
Epigrams: Accept a miracle . 397 

— Behold ambitions of . . . 398 

— Here stopt by hasty death . 3(58 

— I am his Highness' dog at Kew 396 

— In the lines that you sent . 396 

— Martial translated . . .399 

— Now Europe's balanced . 397 

— on Epitaphs . . . .396 

— Radnor, Lord, To . . . 390 

— Though sprightly Sappho . 399 

— What god, what»genius . . 397 

— What's fame with men . - 397 

— Yes, 'tis the time . . .386 



376 

94 

319 



Epigrams: You beat your pate 
Epilogue to Rowe's " Jane Shore 

— to the Satires 
Epistles: Addison, Joseph, To . 

— Augustus Caesar, To . 

— Blount, Teresa, To 

— Craggs, James, To 

— Horace, Imitations of 

— Jarvis, Mr., To . 

— Moral Essays . 

— Oxford, Earl of , To . . .333 
Epitaphs: Atterbury, Dr. Francis, 

On 348 

— Butler, Samuel, On . . 350 

— Charles, Earl of Dorset, On . 342 



. 297 
337, 340 

. 334 
277, 506 

. 335 
. 223 



Coningsby, Lord, On 
Corbet, Mrs., On 



345 

— Craggs, James, On . . 262, 343 

— Digby, Robert and Mary, On . 345 

— Edmund, Duke of Buckingham, 

On 348 

— Fenton, Elijah, On . 347 

— Gay, John, On . . , .347 

— Harcourt, Simon, On . . 343 

— Hughes, John, and Sarah Drew, 

To 386 

— Kneller, Sir Godfrey, On . . 346 

— Newton, Sir Isaac, For . , 348 

— Rowe, Nicholas, For . . . 344 

— Trumbull, Sir Win., On . .342 

— Westminster Abbey, For one 
who would not be buried in 349 



346 
399 
40 
185 



— Withers, General Henry, On 
Erinna, Epigram to . 
Essay on Criticism . 

— on Man, An 
Fable of Dryope, The . , .436 

Fan, On, a 443 

Farewell to London . . . 361 
Fenton, Elijah, Epitaph on . 347 
Garden, The— imitation of Cowley 444 
Gay, John, Epigram to . . 398 

Epitaph on . . .347 

To 369 

Glumdalclitch, Lamentation of . 392 
Gulliver, Lemuel, To . . . 394 
Happy Life of a Parson— an imita- 
tion 449 

Harcourt, Simon, Epitaph on . 313 
Horace, Imitations of . 277, 506 

Hough, Bishop, Epigram to . . 398 
Howe, Miss, " what is prudery? 377 
Hughes, John, and Sarah Drew, 

Epitaphs on . . . .386 
Hylas and JEgon ; or Summer . 34 
Imitations of English Poets . . 443 

— of Horace . . . 277,506 
Impartial Jove . . . .401 
Inscription on a Grotto . . 396 

— on a Punch-bowl . . . 399 
" Jane Shore / ' Epilogue to Rowe's 94 
January and May .... 466 
Jarvis, Mr., Epistle to . . 335 
Juvenile poems .... 27 
Kneller, Sir Godfrey, Epigram to 397 

Epitaph to . . . .346 

Knowledge and characters of men 223 
Lady singing to her lute . . 443 



POP3 

Prayer 



404 



Lamentation of Glumdalclitch 
London, Farewell to 
Looking-glass, The 
Macer, a character 
Man, An Essay on 
Marlborough's House, On . 
Martial, Epigram of . 
Martinus Scriblerus 
Memoir of Alexander Pope 
Messiah— a sacred eclogue . 
Metamorphoses of Ovid, Transla- 
tions from .... 
Montagu, Lady— on her picture 

Mary Wortley, To . 

Moore, John, To . 
Moral Essays in five epistles 
Mortimer, Earl, Epistle to . 
Newton, Sir Isaac, Epitaph for . 
O -wretched Britain— a fragment 
Ode on St. Cecilia's Day 

— on Solitude .... 
Ovid, Translations from 
Oxford, Earl of, Epistle to 
Pastoral poetry. Discourse on 
Phryne — an invitalioa 

Pope, Alexander, Me noir of 
Prayer of Brutus— a translation 
Prologue for D'Urf ey r s last play 

— to Tragedy of Cato 
Prudery? What is— answer to Miss 

Howe 

Queen Caroline, On a picture of . 
Qumbus Flestrin, To . 
Radnor. Lord, Epigram to . 
Rape of the Lock 
Ricardus Aristarchus . 
Riches, Of the Use of . . 239, 
Rochester, Earl of, Imitations of 
Rowe, Nicholas. Epitaph for 
Saint Cecilia's Day, Ode on . 
Sandy's Ghost .... 
Sappho to Phaon— a translation . 



377 
387 
391 
300 
62 
543 
253 
446 
344 
351 
3^3 
429 



Satires 

— Epilogue to the . 

— of Dr. John Donne . 

— of Horace imitated . 
Shirley, Lady Frances, To . 
Silence, On— an imitation 
Solitude, Ode on . 

Song by a person of quality— a 
burlesque .... 

Southern, Thomas, To . 

Spring, or Damon 

Statius, Translation from the The- 
bais of 

Summer, or Alexis .... 

Swift, Jonathan Imitation of . 

Swift's ancestor's, On . 

Temple, Sir Richard, Epistle to 

— of Fame, The .... 
Thebais of Statius— a translation 
Three Gentle Shepherds 

Tofts, Mrs., On . 
Translations ....." 
Trumbull, Sir William, Epitaph on 
Twickenham grotto, On his . 
Umbra . . . 
Unfortunate Lady, Elegy to an . 
Universal Prayer, The 
Use of Riches, The . . .239, 
Vertumnus and Pomona . 
Waller, Edmund, imitated . 
Weeping, imitation of Cowley . 
Westminster Abbey, Epitaph for 
one who would "not be buribd in 
Wife of Bath, The— her prologue 
Wilmot, John, Imitation of 
Winchelsea, Lady, To . 
Windsor Forest .... 

Lines to 

Winter, or Daphne . . . 
With no poetic ardor fired . 
Withers, Gen. Henry, Epitaph on 
Women, Of the characters of 



319 
496 

277 
400 
446 



27 

405 
31 
449 



451 
405 
381 

375 
405 
342 
376 
377 
90 
221 
253 



445 

349 
485 
446 
376 

96 
381 

37 
390 
346 
231 



Pope, Alexander, Memoir of 

Preface to the Iliad of Honier 

(translator). See Homer. 

Popilius, Lena, c. in Julius Caesar 
Poplar field, The ----- 
Poppies. (Leigh Hunt.) --'■.-- 

Poppy, Poesy of the 

Port Royal, At ------ 

Portentous change when history can appear 
Portia, c in Merchant of Venice - 

— c. in Julius Caesar 

Portrait, A Bro. 6Q ; Hoi. 85 

— of a child, On 

— of a gentleman, To the - 

— of a lady, To the ----- 

— of Henry viii. — a sonnet - - - - 

— The - - - - - Mer. 221, 427; 

— To a. (Mrs. A. M. Butterfield.) 
Portuguese, From the - 

— sonnets, Translations ----- 



- Pope 7 
Iliad 30 

Sha. 764 

- Cow. 439 

Flo. 478 

- Flo. 124 
Whi. 268 
Wor. 439 

Sha. 181 

- Sha. 764 
Keats 273 

- Cam. 306 

Hoi. 82 

- Hoi. 8 
Wor. 242 

Eos. 80, 231 

Fav. 185 

Byron 254 

Bro. 152 



^ vo Prayer 

Posie, The," Remarks on - - - - Burns 304 

Posteriors of this day ----- Sha. 150 

Posthumus Leonatus, c. in Cymbeline - - Sha. 944 

Posy, The - - Her. 286 

Possession -------- Ros. 291 

Potations pottle deep ----- Sha. 889 

Pour the sweet milk of concord - Sha. 804 

Poverty, Alice Fell; or - - Wor. 81 

— and blindness— an aphorism - Lon. 94 
Power, like a desolating pestilence - - She. 39 

— of music Wor. 172 

— of Russia, The Cam. 242 

— of song -------- Sch. 217 

— of sound ------- Wor. 210 

— * of woman - Sch. 234 

— of words, The — an essay - - - - Poe 190 
Powers and dominions, deities of heaven " - Mil. 36 

— celestial ! whose protection - - - Burns 200 
Powers' Greek slave — a sonnet ... Bro. 91 
Practical charity. (Geo. Crabbe.) - - Fav. 59 
Prsesulibus dirum te Musa coarguit hostem - Her. 567 

— nostris fastus, Melvine, tumentes - - Her. 562 
Prairies, The ------- Bry. 130 

Praise - Her. 144, 244, 257; Wes. 330 

— be to God, the designer - - - - P. of F. 37 

— blame, love, kisses, tears and smiles - Wor. 171 

— for faith -------- Cow. 93 

— for the fountain opened - Cow. 61 

— him by alms; and when ye help - P. of F. 119 

— in old time the sage Prometheus won - Cow. 571 

— of woman ------- Sch. 219 

— undeserved is scandal in disguise - - Pope 310 
Praised be the God of love - - - - Her. 181 

— be the rivers — a sonnet ... - Wor. 365 

— by the art whose subtle power could stay - Wor. 228 
Praisest law, friend? We, too, love it - Low. 94 
Praising what is lost makes - Sha. 277 
Pratt, Miss. To the anemone - - - . Flo. 129 
Pray heaven for a human heart - - - Ten. 42 
Prayer ----- Eme. 299; Her. 134, 193 

— A - Burns 35, 96; Low. 15; Mer. 288; White 206 

— book, On a Whi. 244 

— for children ------ Cow. 66, 68 

— Force of ------ - Wor. 423 

— in prospect of death - - Burns 37 ; Fav. 44 

— ofAgassiz ------- Whi. 383 

— of Brutus — a translation - Pope 401 

— of nature ----- Bryon 170 ; Fav. 146 

— Reflections on ----- White 483 

— the church's banquet, angel's age - - Her. 134 



Preacher 
Procter 



406 



Preacher, The Whi. 249 

Preciosa, c. in Spanish Student - Lon. 44 

Precious diadem stole and put it Sha. 832 

Precisely. I see it. You all want to say - Hoi. 229 

Predestination -----"__ Wes. 201 

Preface to remarks on vol. ii. of Museum - Burns 315 

— to suppressed poems ----- Sch. 295 
Preferment goes by letter and - - - Sha. 879 
Prejudged by foes determined not to spare - Wor. 371 
Prelude, The, or ; Growth of poet's mind - Wor. 401 

— to Among the Hills ----- Whi. 325 

— to Pennsylvania Pilgrim - Whi. 359 

— to Translations - - - - - - Lon. 412 

— to Voices of the Night - Lon. 1 

— to Tales of a Wayside Inn - - Lon. 232, 272, 292 
Premature spring— a song - Goe. 53 
Prensus in Jilgaeo ------ Mer. 212 

Prentice, George D. Sabbath evening - Flo. 385 

Presence — a song ------ Q oe# 45 

Present crisis, The, 1845 - - Fav. 363; Low. 67 

— fears are less than ------ Sha. 790 

— The - Pro. 87; Fav. 386; Sch. 286 
Presentiment, A - - - - - - - Bry. 179 

Presentiments! ------ Wor. 204 

Preservation — a song ----- Goe. 25 

President's old arm chair, The - Hoi. 174 

Press me not to take more pleasure - - Her. 280 

— not a falling man too far - - - - Sha. 611 

— on. (Park Benjamin.) ----- Fav. 69 

— on ! for it is god-like to unloose - - Wil. 98 

— on, my steed ! I hear the swell - - - Hem. 248 

— the grape and let it pour - - - - Moore 77 

— to the mark (the spirit criea - - - Wes. 167 
Pressed by the load of lif e the weary mind Gol. 179 

— flower, With a ------ Low. 5 

— gentian, The ----- - Whi. 414 

Prest in the tenderness of virgin love - - Wor. 429 

Pretty firstling of the year ! - Flo. 527 

— in amber to observe the forms - - - Pope 269 

— rose-tree, The ------ Moore 657 

Preserver, The - - - - - P. of F. 87 

Priam, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - - Sha. 622 

Priam's castle- walls had sunk - - - Sch. 124 

Pride and forgetfulness, love - Ten. 469 

— of New England ! ----- Whi. 47 

— of the British stage ----- Cam. 169 

— of the garden, the beauteous - - - Flo. 147 

— of youth — a sonnet ----- R s. 238 
Priest, Nancy A. W. Over the river - - Fav. 128 

— to the temple, A ----- - Her. 311 



407 



Preacher 
Procter 



Priesthood, The ------ Her. 

Priestley Joseph, To — a sonnet - Col. 

Priests, tapers, temples swim before my sight Pope 
Primitive Saxon clergy — a sonnet - - - Wor. 
Primrose, Early. (Kirke White.) - - Flo. 

— evening, The. (Langhorne.) - - - Flo. 

— of the rock Wor. 203 ; Fav. 

— Poesy of the - Flo. 

— The. (Mrs. Hemans. ) Flo. 

— The. (Mrs. Hunter.) ----- Flo. 

— To a. (Carrington.) Flo. 

— To an early - White 

- - Flo. 

- Flo. 

- Flo. 

- Flo. 
Flo. 

- She. 

- Hem. 



— To the. (Carew.) 
Primroses. (Keats.) - 

— a bouquet. (M. E. Lee.) - 

— Sad. (Wilson.) 

— To. (Herrick.) - 
Prince Athanase - - - 

— Madoc's farewell 



— of Wales, To the - - - - - - Tho. 

— prelate, potentate and peer • - - Scott 
Prince's day, The ----- Moore 
Princess of France, c. in Love's Labor's Lost Sha. 

— The— a medley ------ Ten. 

— The, Extracts from - - - Poe 46 ; Fav. 
Prior of Maison Dieu, c. in Halidon Hill - Scott 
Prioress' tale, The (modernized) - Wor. 

Prioresses tale, The Cha. 

Priscilla --- Lon. 

Prisoner for debt, The Whi. 

— of Chillon — a fable - Byron 

— The^-a sonnet - - - - - - Bro. 

Prisoners of Naples, The - - - - - Whi. 

Prisons - - - - - - - - Cra. 

Privileged men, The. (Divan, xii.) - - Goe. 

Problem, The Erne. 15; Whi. 

Processions -------- Wor. 

Procida, Count di, c. in Vespers of Palermo Hem. 

Proclamation, The - Whi. 

Procrastination - - - - - - • - Cra. 

PROCTER, ADELAIDE ANNE, Poems of: 

Angel of Death 84 

Angel's Bidding . . . .331 

— Story 21 

Annunciation, The .... 374 

Appeal, An 376 

Army of the Lord, The . . .357 

Be Strong 72 

Because 191 

Beggar, A 437 

Beyond 216 

Birthday Gifts .... 432 
Borrowed Thoughts . . . 279 



Bride's Dream 
Carver's Lesson 
Castle in the Air . 
Chain, A . 
Changeling, A 
Changes . 
Chant, A 
Chaplet of Flowers 

— of Verses . 
Christmas Carol 

— Flowers . 
Church in 1S49 . 



260 

94 

115 

358 

63 

110 

126 

59 

62 

65 

64 

310 

59 

63 

67 

64 

66 

452 

247 

431 

90 

234 

135 

119 

150 

462 

470 

400 

203 

99 

82 

89 

159 

469 

385 

417 

303 

493 

266 

35 



255 

428 
111 



247 
369 
357 



381 
390 



Procter 


A 


Prometheus 


4 


Cleansing Fires . 


63 


Comfort 


. 187 


Comforter, A 


. 294 


Confido et Conquiesco . 


. 388 


Contrast, A . . . 


. 326 


Cradle-song of the Poor 


. 70 


Crown of Sorrow . 


. 145 


Dark Side, The 


. 102 


Dead Past, A 


. 46 


Desire, A . 


. 383 


Discouraged .... 


. 287 


Doubting Heart, A . 


. 47 


Dream, A . . . 


85 


— Life 


. 250 


Echoes 


. 28 


Envy 


. 214 


Evening Chant . 


. 394 


— Hymn 


. 335 


Expectation .... 


. 316 


False Genius, A 


. 29 


Farewell, A . 


. 121 


Fidelis ..... 


. 129 


First Sorrow, A . 


. 104 


Fishers of Men 


. 391 


For the Future . 


344 


Friend Sorrow 


. 33 


Give 


107 


— me thy Heart 


. 92 


— Place . 


243 


God's Gifts .... 


. 73 


Golden Days 


266 


— Gate. The .... 


. 159 


— "Words .... 




Grief 


. 153 


Hearts 


338 


Home at Last .... 


. 188 






Homeless 


. 441 


— Poor 


407 


Homeward Bound . 


. 53 


Hours 




Hush! 


. 181 


Ideal, An 


317 


If thou could'st know 


. 290 


Illusion 


174 


In the Wood .... 


. 231 


Incompleteness . . . . 


114 


Inner Chamber 


. a36 


Jubilee of 1850 . 




Judge not 


. 32 


King and Slave . 


246 


Fought Errant, A . 


. 50 


Kyne Eleison . 


372 


Lament for the Summer 


. 90 


Legend, A 


431 


— of Bregenz, A . . . 


. 115 


— of Provence, A . . . 


203 


Lesson of the War . 


. 145 


Letter, A 


292 


Letters, The .... 


. 179 


Life and Death . 


61 


— in Death and Death in Life 


. 168 


Light and Shade .... 


283 


Linger, O gentle Time . 


. 52 


Links with Heaven 


439 


Listening Angels . 


. 264 


Little Longer, A . 
Lost Chord, A . 


151 


. 223 


Love Token, A 


126 


Maximus 


. 220 


Milly"s Expiation 


414 



408 



tumn 



Ministering Angels . 

Murmurs 

My Journal 

— Picture 

— Picture Gallery . 

— Will . 

Names of our Lady 
Never Again 
New Mother, A 
Now 

Old Tear"s Blessing 
One by One . 
Optimus . 
Ora pro me . 
Our Daily Bread 

— Dead . 

— Titles . 

Over the Mountain 

Parting, A 

Past and Present . 

Peace of God . 

Per Pacem ad Lucem 

Phantoms 

Philip and Mildred 

Pictures in the Fire 

Pilgrims. The 

Present, The . 

Recollections 

Remembrance of Aui 

Requital 

Rest . 

— at Evening 
Retrospect, A . 
Returned—" Missing " 
Sacred Heart. The . 
Sailor Boy. The . 
Sent to Heaven 
Shadow. A . 
Shining Stars . 
Shrines of Mary . 
Sowing and Reaping 
Spring . 
Star of the Sea 
Storm. The . 
Story of the Faithful 
Strive, Wait and Pray 
Student, A 
Thankfulness 

Three Evenings in a Life 

— Roses 

— Rulers . 
Threefold 
Tomb in Ghent 
Too late 
Treasures . 
Triumph of Time 
True Honors . 

— or False 
Tryst with Death 
Two Interpreters 

— Loves . 

— Spirits 

— Worlds . 
Tyrant and Captive 
Unexpressed . 
Unknown Grave . 
Unseen 
Vision, A 
Voice of the Wind 
Voices of the Past 
Waiting . 



Soul 



409 



Procter 
Prometheus 



Warning, A . . 
Warrior to his Dead Bride 
Wayside Inn 
Wind, The 
Wishes . 



218 
291 
95 
315 
165 



Woman's Answer, A . . .321 

— Last Word, A .... 342 

— Question, A 44 

Words 114 



Incompleteness 



Fav. 
Fav. 
Fav. 
Fav. 
Flo. 
Flo. 
Flo. 
Flo. 



Procter, Adelaide Anne 

Present, The - 

Strive, wait and pray ..-._■_ 

Procter, Bryan Waller. Address to the ocean 

Come, let us go - 

Firefly, The 

Flowers ------- 

From the rape of Proserpine 

In praise of spring Flo. 

Snow-drop, To the Flo. 

Proculeius, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - Sha. 

Prodigal, The - - - - - - Wes. 

Prodigious this ! the frail one of our play - Pope 
Professions, — law and physic - - - Cra. 
Professor at breakfast table, Poems from - Hoi. 
Programme ------- Hoi. 

Progress - - - - - - Mer. 

— of art - Hood 

— of error - - - Cow. 

Prologe of the f rere Cha. 

— of the myller - Cha. 

— of the reeve - - . - - - - . Cha. 

— of the wyf of Bathe ----- Cha. 
Prologue - Hoi. 

— for D'Urfey's last play ----- Pope 

— for Mr. Sutherland's benefit - - - Burns 

— in heaven. (Faust.) - - - Faust 16 ; Goe. 

— of poet Laberius ------ Gol. 

— of the Chanouns Yeman, The - - - Cha. 

— spoken at Dumfries theater - - - Burns 

— spoken by Mr. Woods - Burns 

— to Canterbury Tales Cha. 

— to Family Legend Scott 

— to Faust - Faust 

— to Hellas She. 

— to Melibeus Cha. 

— to The Day-Dream Ten. 

— to The Princess Ten. 

— to The Wanderer Mer. 

— to Tragedy of Cato Pope 

— to Wheel of Fortune - Byron 
Prologues ------- Tho. 

— and epilogues ------- Dry. 

Prometheus Byron 263; Goe. 177; Lon. 211; Low. 

— c. in Masque of Pandora - - - - Lon. 

— c. in Prometheus Unbound - - - She. 



407 
386 
404 
338 
409 
473 
425 
135 
408 
527 
911 
316 

94 
351 
177 
241 
220 
378 
102 
206 

95 
113 
175 
166 
370 
126 
391 
134 
342 
124 
104 

19 
380 

10 
470 
413 
101 
119 
174 

92 
155 
475 
477 

38 
343 
219 



Prometheus a i a 

Quae ^ 1U 

Prometheus bound — a play - Bro. 115 

— unbound — a play She. 219 

— vinctus, From the ----- Byron 134 

Promise, The - Hoi. 141 

Promising — a sonnet ------ Ing. 465 

Prompt transformation works the novel love Wor. 357 

Pronunciation, Kules for ----- Arn. 171 

Procemion - Goe. 257 

Properzia Rossi - - - Hem. 163 

Prophecy, A - - - - - Keats 271 ; Wor. 276 

— of Capys, The ------ Mac. 119 

— of Samuel Sewall, The - Whi. 223 

— The - - - - - - - - - Scott 134 

Prophet, The - - Mer. 461 

Prophetess, The," Prologue to - - Dry. 504 

Prophetic pencil ! wilt thou trace - - - Cam. 231 

Prophet's oath, The P. of F. 190 

Propitious, The P. of F. 173 

Proposal. (Bayard Taylor.) - Fav. 70 

Prose compositions White 410 

— in rhyme Col. 211 

Proselytizers, To ----- Sch. 264 

Proserpina — two sonnets Ros. 304 

Proserpine, Song of ----- ghe. 429 

Prosopopoia ; or, Mother Hubberd's tale - •• Spe. 598 

Prospect, The ----- Bro. 92; Tho. 292 

Prosperity counts courtiers without end Byron 250 

Prospero, c. in Tempest ----- Sha. 1 

Prosperous voyage, The — an epigram - - Goe. 225 

Proteus, c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - Sha. 21 

Prothalamion ; or, a spousal verse - - - Spe. 643 

Proud Maisie is in the wood - Scott 418 

— pedestrian, Reflections of a - - - - Hoi. 5 

— setter up and puller down - Sha. 543 

— were ye mountains— a sonnet - Wor. 251 
Prouder than rustling in unpaid-for silk - Sha. 957 

Provence, Lady of - Hem. 206 

Proverbs -------- Goe. 261 

— against covetise and negligence - Cha. 602 

— of Confucius ------ Sch. 244 

— On passages in book of - - - - Wes. 229, 286 

— Outlandish Her. 437 

Providence Her. 22Q ; P. of F. 138 

Provider, The P. of F. 49 

— The, when God fashioned Paradise - P. of F. 171 
Province of woman. (Hannah More.) - Fav. 238 
Provost, c. in Measure for Measure - Sha. 67 

— of Dumfries, Letter to Burns 508 
Proximitv— a song - Goe. 66 

— of the beloved one — a song - Goe, 45 



A-t-t Prometheus 

411 Quee 

Prudent simplicity — an epigram - - - Cow. 610 

Prudery, What is — answer to Miss Howe - Pope 377 

Psalm 104 paraphrased ----- Tho. 380 

— 137 translated - - - - Byron 264 ; Cow. 512 

— of confession, A ----- - Mer. 294 

— of life, A Lon. 2 

Psalms Mil. 483 

— of David paraphrased - Burns 38 

— On passages in the - - - Wes. 185, 215, 283, 365 
Psyche - - Wil. 306 

— borne by zephyrs Hem. 370 

— propitiating Ceres Bro. 171 

Public occasions, Poems for - Whi. 355 

Publius, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

— c. in Julius Caesar Sha. 764 

Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, c. in Mids.-n.'s D. Sha. 161 

Pugnavimus ensibus - Oss. 181 

Pulley, The ------- Her. 259 

Pumpkin, The - Whi. 126 

Punch song Sch. 120, 122 

Punctorum, garretos, colens - Low. 280 

Punishment of Dratto, Sonnets upon - - Wor. 442 

Pupil in magic — a ballad Goe. 132 

Puppet-show of life ----- Sch. 279 

Purcell, Mr., Death of Dry. 316 

Purdon, Edward, Epitaph on - - - Gol. 137 

Pure element of waters — a sonnet - - - Wor. 240 

— from the blood of Saul in vain - - - Wes. 272 
Purgatorum animse derisit Iacobus ignem - Mil. 531 
Purgatory (II Purgatorio) -_.-..- Dante 121 
Purge and leave sack, and -.--.-..- Sha. 408 
Purging past wrongs and adding naught L. of A. 133 
Purificatione post Puerperium, De - - - Her. 564 
Puritan war-song — To Canaan - Hoi. 250 
Purple iris hangs his head. The - Mer. 445 

— testament of bleeding war -.."-..'- Sha. 371 
Push off the boat— a song. (Spanish Gypsy.) Eliot 314 
Put a tongue in every wound - - Sha. 779 

— in every honest hand a whip - - - Sha. 903 

— money in thy purse Sha. 885 

— off the vestal veil, nor, oh ! - - - Moore 135 

— out the light and then - Sha. 906 

— the broidery frame away - Bro. 141 

— up the sword ! " The voice of Christ once Whi. 374 
Pym, c. in Charles the First - - - - She. 492 
Pyrganax, c. in (Edipus Tyrannus - - She. 323 
Pyrrham, Ad - - Mil. 469 

, To Rotha— a sonnet - Wor. 245 

uae dicteria suderat Britannus - - - Her. 566 



S uae 412 

Bam <± a -/ 

Quae lenta accedit quam velox prseterit hora ! Cow. 456 

Quack doctors, On— an essay - G-ol. 485 

Quadroon girl, The ------ Lon. 43 

Quaffed in his gratitude immoderate cups - Wor. 664 

Quake to your foundations deep - - - Scott 254 

Quaker alumni, The ------ Whi. 254 

— of the olden time, The ------ Whi. 98 

— To a beautiful ------ Byron 154 

Quakers, At meeting of - - - - - Hoi. 293 

Qual in colle aspro al imbrunir - - - Mil. 472 

Quales aerii montis de vertice nubes - - Cow. 598 

Quam chartam tibi porrigo recentem - - Her. 558 

* — Christus immortalis innocuo gregi - - Her. 572 

Quand les astres de Noel ----- Lon. 323 

Quarrel, In a - Cow. 29 

Quatrains -------- Erne. 238 

Quebec, Taking of ----- Gol. 138 

Queen, a branch of roses so sweet - - - Eliot 296 

— Caroline, On a picture of - - - - Pope 387 

— Guinever ------- Mer. 452 

— Guinever and Launcelot - Ten. 114 

— Guinever had fled the court - - - Ten. 328 

— Mab — a philosophical poem - - - She. 31 

— Mab hath been with you - Sha. 717 

— Mary — a play ------ Ten. 537 

— of Edward the Confessor, c. in Harold - Ten. 615 

— of Prussia's ------- Hem. 197 

— of Richard ii. , c. in Richard ii. - - - Sha. 356 

— serpents, To the ------ Mer. 268 

— of the May Ten. 42 

— of the stars ------- Wor. 396 

— rose of the rosebud garden of girls - - Ten. 234 

— Sigrid the haughty ----- Lon. 248 

— Song of our ------- Cam. 314 

— Thyri and the angelica stalks - - - Lon. 258 

— To the - - - - - - - - Ten. 7 

— To the. (Epilogue to the Idyls.) - - Ten. 533 

— wife of Cymbeline, c. in Cymbeline - - Sha. 944 
Queens. See patronymics in general alphabet. 

— visit to London ------ Cow. 465 

Queensbury, duke of, Stanzas on - - - Burns 127 

Quern modo Roma suis devoverat impia diris Mil. 532 

— tu, summe Deus semel - Her. 580 
Quentin Blane, c. in Auchindrane - - - Scott 494 
Quest of sultaun Solimaun - Scott 406 
Questenberg, c. in The Piccolomini - - - Col. 407 
Question, The - She. 426; Flo. 135 
Questioning -------- Hoi. 194 

Questions and answers Hoi. 209 

— of life . . ? . . - . . Whi. 157 



413 §»£ 

Questions of the hour. (Sarah M. B. Piatt.) Fav. 436 

Quevedo redivivus — vision of Judgment Byron 209 

Qui subito ex imis rerum infastigia - - Cow. 649 

— vive! Hoi. 86 

Quick o'er the wintry waste — a sonnet - White 379 

— throbbed my heart : to horse ! Goe. 47 

— we have but a second Moore 270 

Quickener, The - - - - - - P. of F. 125 

Quickly, Mistress, c. in Merry Wives of Wind- 
sor -------- Sha. 42 

■ c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - Sha. 382 

Quid mihi si facies nigra est? - - - Her. 588 

— mugor calamo favens? - - - - - Her. 539 

— sacra? tandem meruere vestes? - - - Her. 565 
Quiddity, The ------ - Her. 154 

Quiet is a hunger never fed - Wil. 200 

— life, A - - Lon. 413 

— moment, A ------ Mer. 252 

Juimbus Flestrin, To -__-..- Pope 391 

)uince, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 161 

)uintus, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

)uip, The - - Her. 202 

)uirl --------- Sch. 324 

Juis hie superbit, oro? ----- Her. 562 

— iste tandem? non enim vultu ambulat - Her. 586 

— multa gracilis te puer in rosa - - - Mil. 469 
Quit now the town - Eliot 275 

— the hut, frequent the palace - - - Erne. 239 
Quo magis invidiam nobis et crimina confles - Her. 575 

— te, felix Anna, modo denere licebit? - Her. 591 
Quod crux ne quibat fixa clavique additi - Her. 589 
Quos charos habuit Christus Apostolos - Her. 566 

— tu rotatus, quale murmur auscultas - - Her. 567 
Quoth the cedar to the reeds and rushes - Ing. 402 

— the raven, ' ' Nevermore "---.- Poe 54 

R;J. D., 1862 ------- Hoi. 215 

E. S. S. All worshiped gold - - - - Cow. 35 

Raab Kiuprili, c. in Zapolya - Col. 230 

Rabbi Ben Levi, on the Sabbath, read - - Lon. 242 

— Jehosha used to say ----- Low. 363 
Radical war-song, A Mac. 150 
Radna and Krishna united - - - I. S. S. 65 
Radnor, lord, Epigram to Pope 390 
Rae Wilson, esq. , Ode to - Hood 415 
Ragged and tall stood the castle wall - - Mer. 403 

— schools of London Bro. 600 

Railed on lady Fortune Sha. 213 

Raimond di Procida, c. in Vespers of Palermo Hem. 493 

Rain and rainbow Goe. 242 



g?k n 414 

Eain dream, The - Bry. 226 

— in summer Lon. 81 ; Fav. 392 

Eainbow, The. (J. Keble.) - Fav. 398 

— To the Cam. 162 

Eainy day, The - Lon. 37 

Raise the buckler — poise the lance - - Moore 664 

— ye the sword ! let the death-stroke - - Hem. 250 
Eaised from the people's lowest lees - - Wes. 172 

— to-day above my sorrow - Wes. 39 
Eaiser from death, The - P. of F. 107 
Eaising the devil, Eules for - Gol. 427 
Eaisley Calvert, To memory of — a sonnet - Wor. 233 
Ealeigh, Sir Walter, Letter to - - - - Spe. 21 

Sonnet to ------ Spe. 28 

Vision upon the conceit of the Faery 

Queen Spe. 23 

Eambures, c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 
Eamsay, Allan, Songs of - - - - Burns 293, 339 

Eandolph. He lives long who lives well - Fav. 161 

— John of Eoanoke - Whi. 104 

Eanger, The ------- Whi. 206 

Eanging the heights of Scawfell - - - Wor. 402 

Eankest compound of a villainous smell - Sha. 58 

Eankine, John, Epistle to - - - - Burns 149 

To - Burns 139, 181, 188 

Rantin' dog the daddie o't, The — a song - Burns 197 

Eantoul, Eobert Whi. 188 

Eanz des vaches " — a sonnet - Wor. 297 

Eaoul of Eoncval, Sir Tay. 232 

Eape of Lucrece, The ----- gha. 1011 

— of Proserpine, From the. (B. W. Procter.) Flo. 135 

— of the lock, The - Pope 62 

Eaphael -------- Whi. 130 

— Scenes from Faust ----- She. 546 
Eaphael's account of creation. (Milton.) - Fav. 71 

— picture of the Baptist — a sonnet - - Wor. 318 
Eapping at my chamber door - Poe 51 
Eapt above earth by power of one fair face Wor. 318 

— into still communion that transcends - - Wor. 600 

— with the rage of mine own ravish'd - - Spe. 662 
Eapture. (To Laura.) ----- s c h. 26 
Eare composition of a poet-knight - - Hood 181 
Earely, rarely comest thou - She. 438 
Eash adventurer, bear thee back ! - - Scott 251 

— mortal and slanderous poet - - - Burns 178 

— thy deed, mortal weed ... - Scott 426 
Eat-catcher, The — a ballad - Goe. 116 
Eatcliff, Sir Eichard, c. in Eichard iii. .- Sha. 556 
Eats instinctively had quit - Sha. 3 
Eattlin 1 , roarin' Willie — a song - - - Burns 217 



415 



Rain 
Red 



Baud the strong - - - - - - - Lon. 254 

Raven in a white chine Ing. 223 

— The - - - Col. 86; Cow. 392; Poe51; Fav. 172 

— The, Author's analysis of - - - - Poe 180 
Raving winds around her blowing - - Burns 209 
Rawdon, lady Charlotte, To - - - - Moore 199 
Raze these long blocks of brick and stone - Whi. 231 
Read, Thomas Buchanan. Summer shower Fav. 416 
Read me a lesson, muse, and speak it loud Keats 255 
Reader ! behold a monument - Cow. 475 

— gentle — if so be Hoi. 241 

— if with no vulgar sympathy. (Hay ley.) White 461 

— what soul that loves a verse can - Flo. 450 
Readers, To my - Hoi. 1 

Real faith - Flo. 150 

Realms quake by turns Wor. 361 

Reaper and the flowers - Lon. 2 ; Flo. 484 

Reason, folly and beauty - Moore 523 

— like sweet bells jangled ----- Sha. 827 

— Love and ----- Fav. 282 ; Moore 145 

— the card, but passion is the gale - - - Pope 197 
Reasoning at every step he treads - - Cow. 393 
Reason's whole pleasure, all the joys - - Pope 212 
Rebecca's hymn. (Ivanhoe.) - - - Scott 422 
Rebellion ! foul dishonoring word - - Moore 435 

— is my theme all day ----- Cow. 391 

Rebuking of Krishna I. S. S. 57 

Recantatory — a sonnet ----- White 315 

Receive, most noble lord, a simple taste - - Spe. 26 

— most noble lord, in gentle gree - - - Spe. 2Q 

— thy sight -------- Bry. 319 

Recipe for civilization Hood 520 

Reciprocal — a song - Goe. 66 

— invitation to the dance— a song - - Goe. 28 

— kindness - - Cow. 599 

Reckless of what I do to - - - - Sha. 797 

Reckoner, The - P. of F. 90 

Reckoning, The — a song - - - - Goe. 96 

Recognition, A — a sonnet Bro. 88 

Recollection, The (to Jane) - She. 445 

Recollections - Pro. 172 

— of Arabian Nights * Ten. 11 

— of love - Col. 166 

Reconciliation --.---- Cow. 30 

— of Achilles and Agamemnon - - - Iliad 394 
Record we too with just and faithful pen - Wor. 363 
Records of woman ------ Hem. 149 

Recovery — a sonnet Wor. 355 

— from sickness, On ----- White 40 
Red cross, Legend of knight of - Spe. 29 



Red a -i o 

Keport ^ 10 

Red glows the forge in Striguil's bounds - Scott 376 

— red rose, A — a song ----- Burns 259 

— Riding-hood ------- Whi. 413 

— river voyageur, The ----- Whi. 247 
Eedbreast chasing the butterfly - - - Wor. 149 

— Epitaph on a tame ----- Cow. 487 

— Invitation to the - Cow. 603 

— To a (in sickness) Wor. 452 

Redding, Richard, Death of. (Milton.) - - Cow. 557 

Redemption ------- Her. 121 

— of Hector's body Iliad 476 

— Universal - - Wes. 188 

Redoubted king of courage leonine - - - Wor. 361 

— lord, in whose courageous mind - - Spe. 26 
Reed, A ... Bro. 297 

— pen, Epitaph on a Cow. 515 

Reenf orcements for lord Wellington - Moore 336 

Reeve, Prologe of the - Cha. 113 

Reeve's tale, The ----- Cha. 115 

Reflection at sea, A - Moore 106 

— on death of Kirke White - - - - White 228 

— Poems of- - - - - - -• -Wor. 412 

Reflections - - - Cra. 497; Fav. 179; Ing. 85 

Reflections ----- Rog. 342; Wor. 368 

— by William Holloway - White 222 

— of a proud pedestrian ----- Hoi. 5 

— on leaving a place of retirement - - Col. 58 
Reform it altogether ------ Sha. 827 

Reformation, The— a sonnet - - - - Wor. 369 

Reformer, The ----- Whi. 98 

Reformers, Eninent — a sonnet - - - Wor. 370 

— of England, To the ----- Whi. 97 
Refusal of aid between nations — a sonnet - Ros. 161 

of Charon, The ----- - Ayt. 200 

^n, dtr. of Lear, c. in King Lear - - Sha. 847 

Regent of Scotland, c. in Halidon Hill - - Scott 462 

Regillus, Battle of the lake - - - - Mac. 56 

Reginald Pole, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

Region of life and light ----- Bry. 140 

Regret Ing. 394 

Regrets Hoi. 190; Wor. 378 

— at Rome — a sonnet ----- Wor. 313 
Rehearse to me, ye sacred sisters mine - Spe. 581 
Reignier, duke of Anjou, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 
Rein in thy snorting charger - - - - Bry. 157 
Reiver's wedding, The ----- Scott 460 
Rejoice for a brother deceased! - - -Wes. 144 

— in the clefts of Gehenna - - - - Bro. 182 

Release of Tasso, The ------ Hem. 399 

Relenting, The P. of F. 154 



417 



Red 
Report 



Relentless past ! canst thou not hear - Byron 245 

Reliance on God. (Casket.) - Fav. 216 

Relic, The ------- - Whi. 64 

Religio laici ; or, a layman's faith - - Dry. 155 

Religion and church - Goe. 263 

— blushing, veils her sacred fires - - Pope 184 

— does not censure or exclude - Cow. 238 

— pure rejects the dress - Wes. 265 

— 'twas produced this poem's fire - - - Sch. 315 

Religion's musings Col. 63 

Religious poems Wil. 63 

— sects Cra. 334 

Reluctant call it was ; the rite delayed - - Wor. 438 

Remarks on Scottish songs - Burns 293 

Remember— forget Hoi. 210 

— him thou leav'st behind - Moore 90 

— him whom passion's power - - - Byron 252 

— the glories of Brien the brave - - - Moore 214 

— the poor creature, small beer - - - Sha. 416 

— thee ! - - - - - Byron 250 ; Moore 257 

Remembered picture, To a - Hem. 236 

Rememberest thou the hour we past? - - Moore 313 

Remembering music ------ Low. 9 

Remembrance Byron 167; Mer. 215; She. 440; Whi. 170 

— (Percival.) ------- Fav. 235 

— (Southey.) ------- Fav. 23 

— and reflection how allied - Pope 192 

— of autumn Pro. 299 

— of Collins - -Wor. 21 

— of that most heroic spirit -'--.- Spe. 28 

— of the good ------- Goe. 205 

— See also Memory. 

Remick, Miss M. Grave of Mrs. Judson - Fav. 268 

Remind me not ------- Byron 231 

Remonstrance -"-'-- Ing. 349; Moore 601 

Remorse Burns 67; Lon. 340 

Remorse— a tragedy ------ Col. 310 

— (Commonplace book.) - - Burns 580 
Remote, unfriended, melancholy, slow - - Gol. 69 
Rend, rend thine hair, Cassandra - - Ros. 160 
Render me worthy of this noble wife - - Sha. 772 

Rendition, The - Whi. 197 

Rendsch Nameh. (Divan, v.) - - - - Goe. 368 

Renowned lord, that for your worthiness - Spe. 27 

Renwick, Mrs. Jean, Song to - - Burns 221 

Repentance ----- Her. 131; Wor. 110 

Reply to an invitation — an epigram - Burns 177 

— to verses of J. M. B. Pigot - - - Byron 156 
Report from below ------ Hood 601 

— me and my cause - - - - Sha. 845 

27 



Report 118 

Rhone ±10 

Eeport of an adjudged case - - - - Cow. 397 

Eepose in God. (Mme. Guyon.) - - - Cow. 628 

Eeprisal Her. 118 

Beproach. (To Laura.) - - - - - Sch. 313 

Eeproof — a sonnet ------ Wor. 359 

— The— an epigram ----- Burns 178 

Eeputation is an idle and most false - - Sha. 891 

Eequiem, A ------ - Low. 18 

Eequiescat ------ Mer. 299 ; Ten. 387 

— in pace -------- Ing. 31 

Eequital, The ------ - Pro. 217 

Eescue, The. (Agnes.) ----- Hoi. 93 

Besemblance, The - - - - - Moore 135 

Eesentment - - - - - - - Cra. 170 

Eesidence at Cambridge (prelude) - - - Wor. 514 

Eesignation ----- Lon. 129; Sch. 79 

Eesigned to live, prepared to die - - - Pope 382 

Eesolution and independence - - - Wor. 178 

Eesolve -------- Scott 380 

Eesolved, O God, with all to part - - - Wes. 238 

Eespect-to Dryden, Sheffield justly paid - Pope 350 

Eesponse Whi. 417 

Eest --------- Pro. 251 

— and be thankful — a sonnet - Wor. 386 

— at evening - Pro. 192 

— for the day is passing - - - Pro. 62 

— more precious than a sleep - Fav. 148 

— my troubled spirit, rest - Wes. 129 

— on your battle-fields Hem. 325 

— pilgrim, rest !------ Hem. 339 

— rest, perturbed earth Wor. 493 

— rest perturbed spirit ----- Sha. 819 
Eesting-place, The— a sonnet - Wor. 332 
Eesting Avithin his tent at turn of day - - Ing. 488 
Eestless forms of living light - - - - Flo. 382 

— heart, The — an aphorism - Lon. 94 

— love — a song Goe. 55 

Eestorer, The - P. of F. 122 

Betaliation Cow. 611; Gol. 114 

Eetired cat, The Cow. 484 

— mariner, By a — a sonnet - Wor. 403 

— remote from human noise - - - White 322 
Retirement ----- Cow. 82, 221 ; Wor. 235 

Eetort courteous !------ Sha. 227 

Eetreat from Moscow (anon.) - - - - Fav. 248 

Eetribution— an aphorism - - - Lon. 94 

Retro me, Sathana ! " — a sonnet - - - Ros. 271 

Retrospect, A - - - - - Pro. 193; Wes. 55 

— love of nature Wor. 553 

Retrospections Mer. 454 



4- 1 9 Beport 

* L v Bhone 

Retrospective review, A Hood 453 

Return — a sonnet - Wor. 330 

— again, my forces late dismayed - - Spe. 689 

— content ! — a sonnet Wor. 332 

— no never, while the withering hand - - Moore 491 

— of the birds Bry. 310 

— of youth, The - Bry. 201 ; Fav. 408 

— The - Hem. 218 

— to plague the inventor - - Sha. 792 

— to Ulster - - Scott 399 

Returned into thy kingdom, Lord - - Wes. 139 

— "missing" ------- p ro . 229 

Returning from its daily quest, my spirit - She. 537 

Reuben and Rose ----- Moore 92 

Reullura -------- Cam. 182 

Reunion, The. (Divan, viii.) - - - Goe. 378 

Revealed a shape Praxiteles might worship Wil. 19 

Revelation, On a passage in book of - - Wes. 307 

Revelers, The - Hem. 341; Fav. 57 

Revenge of Rain-in-the-face, The - - - Lon. 375 

— The ------- Ten. 657 

Revered, beloved— O you that hold - - Ten. 7 

— defender of beauteous Stuart - - - Burns 111 
Reverence to Ganesha ! - - - - I. S. S. 10 
Reverie, A Ing. 454 

— at Glenmary - - Wil. 94 

— at the Boar's Head tavern — an essay - Gol. 469 

— of poor Susan ------- Wor. 172 

Reviewer, Lines to a - - - - - She. 432 

Revisited Whi. 321 

Revisiting the country, On - Bry. 91 

— the sea-shore, On - Col. 167 

Revisited thus the glimpses - - - Sha. 817 

Revival of popery— a sonnet - Wor. 368 

— The - - - Ten. 103 

Revolt of Islam, The She. 95 

Reward, The Hoi. 95; Whi. 130 

Rewarder, The - - - - - - P. of F. 156 

Reynald, c. in Halidon Hill - Scott 462 

Reynaldo, c. in Hamlet Sha. 811 

Reynold, c. in House of Aspen - - - Cow. 400 

Reynolds, Sir Joshua, To Cow. 400 

Reynolds, J. H. Water-lily, The - - Flo. 164, 166 

Rhapsody of life's progress - Bro. 95 

Rhea, To Erne. 18 

Rhine, On banks of the — a sonnet - - - Wor. 294 

Rhode Island coal, Meditation on - - - Bry. 95 

Rhodora, The ----- Erne. 39 ; Flo. 530 

Rhoecus - Low. 46 

Rhone, To the river — a sonnet - - - - Lon. 382 



Rhyme 420 

Rhyme of Sir Christopher - - Lon. 314 

— of the Duchess May - . - - - - Bro. 276 
Rhymed distichs ------ Goe. 256 

— lesson, A - - Hoi. 49 

Rhymes — an aphorism Lon. 94 

— of an hour ------- Hoi. 277 

— on the road ------- Moore 581 

Ribaumont, c. in Halidon Hill - - - - Scott 462 

Ricardus Aristarchus ----- Pope 543 

Rich and rare were the gems she wore - Moore 218 

— gifts wax poor when givers - - - Sha. 826 

— in all woman's loveliness - - - Moore 428 

— in bliss, I proudly scorn - Moore 57 

— in having such a jewel - - - - Sha. 28 

— in vegetable gold ----- pio. 27 

— not gaudy ; for the apparel - - - - Sha. 816 

— thou hadst many lovers — poor, hast none Cow. 51 
Richard ii. — an historical play - - - - Sha. 356 
Richard iii. — an historical play - - . Sha. 556 

— c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 Sha. 526 

— duke of Gloucester, c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 556 

— duke of York, c. in Richard iii. - - - Sha. 556 

— Cceur de Lion and the troubadour - - Hem. 117 

at the bier of his father - - - - Hem. 138 

Richard the First — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 361 

Richardson, Gabriel, Epitaph on - - Burns 181 

Richelieu, cardinal, To - - - - - Lon. 338 

Richer than misers o'er their countless hoards Col. 44 

Riches have wings, and grandeur is a dream Cow. 290 

— of a spotless memory Erne. 291 

— Of the uses of - Pope 239, 253 
Richland, Miss, c. in Good-natured Man - Gol. 178 
Richmond, Earl of (Henry viii.), c. in Henry 

vi., pt. 3 - - - - - - -Sha. 526 

(Henry vii.), c. in Richard iii. - - Sha. 556 

— John, Letters to - - - Burns 350, 355, 356, 380 
Riddel, captain, To, of Glenriddel - - Burns 115 

— — Robert, Letters to Burns 441, 442, 579 
Sonnet on death of - Burns 143 

— Mrs. , of Woodley park, Epitaph on - Burns 182 
Impromptu on her birthday - - Burns 141 

— Mrs. Robert, Letters to (see Letters) - Burns 342 

Riddle - - - Cow. 397 

Riddles and parables Sch. 193 

Rides in the whirlwind and directs the storm Pope 159 

Ridley, Latimer and — a sonnet - - - Wor. 369 

Ridonsi donne e giovani amorosi - - * - Mil. 472 

Right in the track where Sherman - - - Whi. 353 

— notions have their slender use - - - Wes. 160 

— sir ! your text I'll prove it true - - Burns 93 



421 I& me 

Right upward on the road of fame - - Erne. 253 

Eighteous God, whose vengeful vials - - Wes. 76 

— O Lord, thy judgments are ! Wes. 105 
Eightly said, Schlossen ! Man loves what - Sch. 262 
Eights - Hoi. 198 

— of woman, The - - - - Burns 139 
Eigs o' barley, The — a song - Burns 194 
Eime of the ancient mariner, The - - - Ool. 101 

Eimini, Francesca da Eos. 143 

Eimol, Thora of Lon. 248 

Einaldo — a cantata ----- Goe. 153 

Einaldo Einaldi, Count ----- Mer. 207 

Eing and staff, oh to me on a Ehenish flask Sch. 286 

— joyous chords ! ring out again ! Hem. 341 ; Fav. 57 

— of Polycrates - Sch. 138 

— out, wild bells. (Tennyson.) - - - Fav. 403 

— The - - Moore 85, 134 

Eingiet, The ------- Ten. 388 

Eings and seals ------ Moore 178 

Eip Van Winkle, M.D. ----- Hoi. 280 

Eippling through thy branches goes - - Low. 80 

Eise, Britons, rise, if manhood be not dead - Ten. 485 

— heart ; thy Lord is risen - Her. 123 

— honest muse! and sing, The Man - - - Pope 249 

— my soul, with ardor rise - Wes. 366 

— they have risen : of brave Aneurin ask - Wor. 356 
Eising full moon, To the - Goe. 72 
Eitner, Gov. , On reading message of - - Whi. 52 
Eitter Bann, The ------ Cam. 201 

Eituum usu, De - Her. 571 

Eival ladies, The," Prologue to - - - Dry. 477 

River , To the Poe 149 

— Duddon, The — a series of sonnets - - Wor. 326 

— of yesterday — a sonnet Lon. 383 

— Otter, To the— a sonnet - - - Col. 92 

— path, The - - - Whi. 284; Fav. 316 

— - that in silence windest ... - Lon. 38 

— that stealest with such silent pace - - Lon. 364 

— Yvette, To the - - - - - - Lon. 376 

Eivermouth rocks are fair to see - Whi. 297 

— Wreck of - - - - - - - Whi. 297 

Eivers, Earl, c. in Eichard hi. - Sha. 556 

— Lord, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - - - Sha. 526 
Eivers of Babylon, By the ... Byron 195 

— The ------- Sch. 273 

Eivulet, The Bry. 50 

Eizpah ------ Bry. 47; Ten. 689 

— with her sons Wil. 32 

Eoaring brook Wil. 293 

Eob me the exchequer Sha. 400 



Rob 
Romaunt 



422 



Rob Roy's grave ----- 
Robbers, The, Extracts from 
Robbins, Chandler, Ordination hymn of 
Robert of Lincoln ----- 
of Sicily, King 



brother of pope Urban 

Robert Rawlin ! Frosts were falling 



Wor. 

Sen. 
Erne. 

Bry. 

Lon. 

Lon. 
Whi. 

Col. 
Burns 

Sha. 

Rog. 

Burns 

Whi. 

Wor. 



Robespierre, c. in Fall of Robespierre - 
Robin — a song ------ 

— a page, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor 

— Epitaph on a 

— shure in hairst — a song - 

— The - - - - - - 

Robinson, Henry C. , To - 

— Mrs. Snow-drop, The ----- Flo. 

— of Leyden ------- Hoi. 

Rochester, earl of, Imitations of Pope 

Rock of Cader Idris, The - Hem. 

— The,"inElGhor ----- -Whi. 

Rocks of my country ! let the cloud - - Hem. 
Roderick, c. in House of Aspen - - - Scott 
Roderigo, c. in Othello ----- Sha. 

Roger, c. in Queen Mary ----- Ten. 

Rogers, master, Epitaph on - - - - Dry. 

ROGERS, SAMUEL, Poems of: 



258 
336 
192 
229 
243 
243 
206 
382 
196 

42 
341 
290 
375 
307 

24 
180 
446 
251 
244 
360 
562 
879 
537 
316 



Adventure, An. (Italy.) . . 132 
Alps, The 26 

— at Daybreak .... 262 
Arqua. (Italy.) .... 67 
Asleep, On one . . . .239 
Bag of Gold, The. (Italy.) . 143 
Banditti. (Italy.) . . . .128 
Bergamo. (Lombardy.) . . 31 
Bologna. (Italy.) . . . .73 
Boy of Egremond . . .240 
Brides of Venice, The . . .55 
Butterfly, To the . . . . 249 

Caius Cestius 117 

Campagna of Florence " . . 82 

— of Rome 112 

Cassino, Monte. (Italy.) . . 158 
Character, A— an epigram . . 241 

— A. (Italy.) ... o 149 

Coll' alto 35 

Columbus, Voyage of . . 295 
Corao, Lake of .... 28 
Descent, The .... 19 

Don Garzia 80 

Dropmore, Written at . . 345 
Egremond, Boy of . . . .240 
Epigrams: A character . . 241 

— From the Greek . . .246 
Epilogue for Mrs. Siddons . 336 
Epistles: To a Friend . . .210 
Epitaphs: On a Robin Redbreast 341 
Euripides, From . . . .236 
Farewell, A 244 

— to Italy 168 

Feluca, The. (Italy.) . . .162 
Fire-fly, The. (Italy.) . . .120 



Florence, Campagna of . 82 

— (Italy.) 77 

Foreign Travel. (Italy.) . . 122 
Foscari, Francesco . . .59 

Fountain, The. (Italy.) . . 127 
Fragment of statue of Hercules, 

Toa 245 

Friend, Epistle to a . . .210 

— on his Marriage, To a .241 

Funeral, A 106 

Garzia, Don 80 

Geneva, Lake of . . .11 

Genoa. (.Italy.) .... 166 

Genevra 69 

Gnat, To the .... 340 

Gondola, The . . . 51 

Graces, Inscription for Temple to 

the 249 

Great Saint Bernard ... 15 
Greek epigram. From a . . 246 
Harper, The. (Italy.) . . 160 
Hercules, To fragment of statue of 245 
Highlands of Scotland, In the . 247 

Human Life 183 

Interview, An .... 97 
Inscription, An .... 252 

— for a Temple to the Graces . 249 

— for Stratfield Saye . . .341 
Italian Song. An .... 246 

— Sonnet, From an . . .339 

Italy 11,31 

Jacqueline . . . 219 

Jorasse 20 

July, Written in, 1834 . . . 345 
Jungfrau, The « . . 2i 



423 



Rob 
Komaunt 



Lake of Geneva 
Life, Human 
Luigi, Andrea di 
Marguerite de Tours . 
Memoir of Samuel Rogers 
Memory, Pleasures of 
Midnight, Written at 
Miscellaneous poems . 
Monte Cassino. (Italy.) 
Naples. (Italy.) . 
National prejudices 
Notes to " Italy " 

— to " Pleasures of Memory ' 
Nun, The. (Italy.) 
Oak, To an 
Ode to Superstition 
Psestum, Lucania. (Italy.; 
Pilgrim, The .... 
Pleasures of Memory, The 
Reflections .... 
Robin, Epitaph on a 
Roman Pontiffs, The . 
Rome, Campagna of 

— Italy 

Rogers, Samuel, Memoir of 

Butterfly, To the 

Italian sonnet, From an 



. 11 

. 183 
. 43 

24 

. 5 
. 254 

. 233 
233,330 

. 158 
. 137 

. 109 
. 171 
208,292 
. 118 

. £35 
. 330 

. 154 
94 

. 254 
. 342 

. 341 
. 116 

. 112 
. 100 



Sailor, The .... 
Saint Bernard, Great . 
— Mark's Place, Venice 
Scotland, In the Highlands of . 
Sick Chamber, In a 
Siddons, Mrs., To be spoken by 
Sonnet: From the Italian 
Sorrento. (Italy.) 
Stratfield Saye, Inscription for 
Superstition, Ode to . . 
Tear, On a 

To 24 

Torso, To a fragment of the 
Tours, Marguerite de . 
Two Sisters, To 
Venice, Brides of . 

-(Italy.) 

Voice that had been lost, To a . 



Voyage of Columbus 
Westminster Abbey, Written in 
Wish, The .... 
Written in 1834 . . . . 
Youngest daughter of Lady — 
To .... . 

- - - - Rog. 

- Flo. 

Fav. 

On a tear - Fav. 

— Sensibility ------ Fav. 

Rokeby Scott 

Roldan, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 

Rolf, c. in Harold ------ Ten. 

Rollicking Hans — a song - Goe. 

Roma dabit oram ------ Her. 

Romaic love song translated - Byron 

— song, Translation of - - - - Byron 
Roman antiquities— a sonnet - Wor. 

— antiquities at Bishopstone — a sonnet - - Wor. 

— aqueduct, A - - - - - - - Hoi. 

— Campagna, View across - Bro. 

— consul, The, doomed his sons — a sonnet - Wor. 

— elegies -------- Goe. 

— gnTs song ------- Hem. 

— pontiffs, The ------ R g. 

— refinements, Temptations from — a sonnet - Wor. 

— Virgil, thou that singest - Ten. 
Romance ----- Moore 597 ; Poe 

— Ode to the Genius of - - - - - White 

— of Dunois - - Scott 

— of the Ganges ------ Bro. 

— of the swan's nest - Bro. 

— of the water-lily Wor. 

— To Byron 

Romans, countrymen and lovers - - - Sha. 

— On a passage in epistle to Wes. 
Romany girl, The ------ Erne. 

Romaunt of Margret Bro. 



15 

45 

247 

340 



151 
341 



5,251 
. 245 
24 
. 234 
55 
. 38 

237 
. 295 

250 
. 242 

346 

' 333 
5 

344 
281 
207 
304 
177 
156 
615 

66 
574 
251 
244 
389 
245 

77 
617 
442 
279 
424 
116 
355 
729 
163 
330 
397 

45 
113 
321 
158 
777 
175 
195 

33 



Romaunt a o A 

Rossetti ^^ 

Romaunt of the page ----- Bro. 229 

Rome - - - Tho. 230 

— ancient, Lays of - - - - - - Mac. 31 

— At— a sonnet - - Wor. 313 

— Campagna of Rog. 112 

— (Italy.) -------- Rog. 100 

— has fallen— a fragment - She. 505 

— Rome ! thou art no more - Hem. 424 

— Ruins of. (ByBellay.) - Spe. 677 

— Written at, 1833 Erne. 301 

Romeo and Juliet — a tragedy - - - Sha. 712 

Romero -------- Bry. 93 

Romney, George, Sonnet to - - - - Cow. 492 

Rondeau Hood 608 ; Moore 73 

Ronge, To ------- whi. 106 

Ronsard, Pierre de. To the hawthorn - - Flo. 54 

Translations - - - - Keats 256; Mer. 237 

Room for the leper ! Room - Wil. 49 

— gentle flowers ! for my child - - - Wil. 75 
Roosdyk, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - - Tay. 232 

Root and leaf - Mer. 192 

Ropewalk, The ------- Lon. 220 

Rosa, To - Moore 74, 78, 81 

Rosalind - - - - -. ■ - - - Ten. 479 

— c. in As You Like It - - - - - Sha. 205 

— and Helen — an eclogue ----- She. 189 
Rosalind's scroll, Words of - - - - Bro. 31 
Rosaline ------- -Low. 17 

— c. in Love's Labor's Lost - Sha. 135 
Roscommon, earl of , To - Dry. 274 
Rose and the dewdrop - - - - P. of F. 186 

— by the wayside. (D. A. Drown.) - - Fav. 280 

— Dead. (Mrs. Browning.) - Flo. 281 

— Green-house ------ Flo. 305 

— Lesson of a. (Spenser.) - Flo. 99 

— Little red. (Goethe.) - Flo. 349 

— Mrs., Letter to Burns 398 

— Moss. (Krummacher.) - Flo. 105 

— of summer, Last. (Moore.) - Flo. 103 

— on New Year's day, To a - - - - Flo. 325 

— Poesy of the Flo. 94 

— Song of the - - - - - - - Bro. 180 

— Song of the. (Hemans.) - Flo. 100 

— The - - Col. 32; Cow. 419; Her. 280; Low. 16 

— The (anon.) ------ Flo. 100 

— The. (Beaumont and Fletcher.) - - - Flo. 516 

— The. (Camoens.) ----- Flo. 106 

— The. (Elton.) ------ Flo. 103 

— To a withered. (Mrs. Whitman.) - - Flo. 329 

— what dost thou here ----- Flo. 100 



425 



Romaunt 
Rossetti 



Eose, Zuleika's. (Byron.) - - - - Flo. 99 

Eosebud by my early walk, A — a song - Burns 206 

— Dying. (Mrs. Osgood.) - Flo. 97 

— Gather ye. (Herrick.) ----- Flo. 107 

— The. (Keble.) ------ Flo. 346 

— To the, Eemarks on Burns 338 
Eose-garden, The - - - - - -P. of F. 91 

Eosemary -------- Eos. 166 

— Die Herz Blume. (Hood.) - - - Flo. 71 

— Herb ----- White 24 ; Flo. 70 

— Poesy of the -> Flo. 69 

Eosencrantz, c. in Hamlet -■_•_•_ Sha. 811 

— lord, Legend of Mer. 275 

Eoses. (Leigh Hunt.) Flo. 475 

— Gather your ------ Flo. 104 

— Legacy of the. (Landon.) - Flo. 106 

— red and violets blue - - - • - - Spe. 235 

— Wars of the — a sonnet ----- Wor. 365 

— White. (Sarah L. P. Smith.) - - - Flo. 387 
Eoslin castle, Eemarks on - - - - Burns 295 

— chapel, Composed in — a sonnet - - Wor. 384 
Eoss, c. in Halidon Hill ----- Scott 462 

— c. in Macbeth ------ Sha. 788 

— Lord. c. in Eichard il ----- Sha. 356 
EOSSETTI, DANTE G., Poems of: 



Adieu 289 

Alas, so long ! . . . . 288 
Alexander II. of Russia— a sonnet 298 
Ardor and Memory — a sonnet . 258 
Aspecta Medusa . . . .105 
Astarte Syriaca— a sonnet . . 303 
Autumn Idleness— a sonnet . 163, 261 

Ave 32 

Ballad of Dead Ladies . . . 136 
Barren Spring— a sonnet . . 267 
Bastille, Place de la, Paris . . 301 
Beauty 141 

— and the Bird— a sonnet . . 163 
Beauty's Pageant — a sonnet . 235 
Beryl-songs . . . 174, 182, 191 
Birth-bond, The— a sonnet . 234 
Blake, William, Sonnet on . . 295 
Blessed Damozel . . . . 11 
Body's Beauty— a sonnet . . 265 
Bridal Birth— a sonnet . . 227 
Bride's Prelude, The . . .112 
Broken Music— a sonnet . . 250 
Brown, Oliver Madox, Sonnet on 300 
Burden of Nineveh ... 21 
Card-dealer, The . . . .102 
Cassandra — a sonnet . . .160 
Change and Fate, Sonnet on . 256 
Chatterton, Thomas, Sonnet on 294 
Chimes ....'. 282 
Choice, The — three sonnets . 262 
Church-porch, The— a sonnet . 300 
Cloud and Wind— a sonnet . 248 

— Confines, The . . . .291 
Coleridge, Samuel T., Sonnet to 295 
Dance of Women— a sonnet . . 154 



Dante at Verona ... 56 

Dantis Tenebrae— a sonnet . . 162 
Dark Day, A— a sonnet . . 260 

— Glass, The— a sonnet. . . 243 
Day-dream, The — a sonnet . 303 

— of Love — a sonnet . . . 234 
Death-in-Love— a sonnet . . 250 

— parting, A 285 

— To, of his lady .... 137 
Death's Songsters— a sonnet . 269 
Down Stream .... 107 

Eden Bower 27 

Equal Troth— a sonnet . . 242 

Even so 106 

Farewell to the Glen— a sonnet 164, 268 
Fiammeta— a sonnet . . . 302 
First love remembered . . 145 
Five English Poets, Sonnets on . 294 
Found (for a picture)— a sonnet 301 
From Dawn to Noon— a sonnet . 266 
Genius in Beauty— a sonnet . 235 
Gracious Moonlight — a sonnet . 236 
Hand. Beautiful, Sonnet to a . 305 
He and I— a sonnet . . . 275 
Heart of the Night ... 259 
Heart's Compass, The . . . 240 

— Haven— a sonnet . . . 237 

— Hope — a sonnet .... 229 
Her Gifts— a sonnet . . . 242 
Hero's Lamp— a sonnet . . 270 
Hill Summit — a sonnet . . 261 
His mother's service to our lady . 138 
Hoarded joy— a sonnet . . 267 
Holy Family,'' For— a sonnet . 2S3 
Honeysuckle, The . . .151 



Rossetti 
Rural 



426 



Hope Overtaken— a sonnet . . 247 
House of Life, The— a sonnet . 227 
Husbandmen, The— a sonnet . 264 
Inclusiveness— a sonnet . . 258 

Insomnia 290 

Italian Street Song . . .141 

Jenny 70 

John of Tours . . .139 

Keats, John, Sonnet on . . . 296 
King's Tragedy, The . . .201 
Kiss, The— a sonnet . . 229 

Known in Vain — a sonnet . . 259 
La Bella Mano— two sonnets . 305 
Lamp's Shrine, The— a sonnet . 244 
Landmark, The— a sonnet . . 260 
Last Confession .... 41 

— Fire— a sonnet . . . .241 

— Three from Trafalgar— a sonnet 297 

Leaf, The 143 

Lif e-in-love— a sonnet . . . 244 

— the Beloved 274 

Lilith— a sonnet .... 158 
Little While, A .... 147 
Lost Days— a sonnet . .* . 269 

— on both sides . . . .271 
Love and Hope .... 248 

— enthroned — a sonnet . . . 227 

— letter, The— a sonnet . .232 

— lily 11. 



— moon, The— a sonnet 

— sweetness— a sonnet . 
Lover's Walk, The— a sonnet 
Love's Baubles— a sonnet 

— Fatality— a sonnet . 

— Last Gift — a sonnet . 

— Lovers— a sonnet . 

— Nocturn .... 

— Testament— a sonnet 
Lovesight— a sonnet 
Luke, St., the painter 
Lyrics . . . . 
Mary Magdalene— a sonnet 
Mary's Girlhood— a sonnet . 
Match with the Moon — a sonnet 
Memorial Thresholds— a sonnet 
Michelangelo's Kiss— a sonnet . 
Mid-rapture— a sonnet . 
Monochord, The— a sonnet 
Moonstar, The— a sonnet 
Morrow's Message, The 
My Father's Close ... 

— Sister's Sleep .... 
New Year's Burden 
Newborn Death— two sonnets . 
Nineveh, Burden of 
Old and New Art— three sonnets 

— Song ended 

One Hope, The— a sonnet . 
Our Lady of the Rocks— a sonnet 
Pandora— a sonnet 
Parted Love— a sonnet . 

— Presence 

Passion and Worship 
Passover in the Holy Family . 

Penumbra 

Picture, Sonnets for . . 153, 293 
Place de la Bastille— a sonnet . 301 
Plighted Promise . . .146 
Portrait, The . . . . 80, 231 

Possession 291 

Pride of Youth— a sonnet . . 238 



. 215 

. 23 7 

. 232 

. 23-! 

. 253 

. 255 

. 230 

. 15 

. 228 

. 228 

157, 263 

145, 279 

. 157 

156 

163 

266 

. 273 

. 233 

164, 265 

. 241 

. 245 

. 140 

. 103 

. 105 

. 275 

21 



Proserpina— two sonnets . . 304 
Refusal of aid between nations . 161 
Retro me, Sathana!— a sonnet . 271 
Rimini, Francesca da . . .143 
Rose Mary . . . . . 166 
Ruggiero and Angelica— a sonnet 154 
Sea-limits, The .... 152 

— spell, A— a sonnet . . . 302 
Secret Parting— a sonnet . . 249 
Severed Selves— a sonnet . . 247 
Shelley, Percy B., Sonnet on . 296 
Sibilla Palmif era— a sonnet . . 158 
Silent Noon— a sonnet . . 233 

Sister Helen 83 

Sleepless Dreams— a sonnet . 246 

Sleeplessness 290 

Song and Music .... 287 

— of the Bower . . . .148 

— throe, The— a sonnet . . 257 
Sonnets for Pictures . . 153, 293 

Soothsay 279 

Soul-light — a somiet . . . 240 
Soul's Beauty— a sonnet . . 264 

— Sphere, The— a sonnet . . 257 
Spheral Change .... 287 
Spring— a sonnet .... 299 

— For— a sonnet .... 294 
Staff and Scrip .... 35 
Still-born Love .... 254 
Stratton Water . . . .91 
Stream's Secret .... 95 

Sudden Light 147 

Sun's Shame, The . . .272 

Sunset Wings 236 

Superscription, A . . . 274 
Supreme Surrender . . . 230 
Three Shadows .... 288 
Through Death to Love . . 247 
Tiber, Nile, and Thames— a sonnet 297 
Tours, John of .... 133 
Trafalgar, Last three from— a 

sonnet ..... 297 
Transfigured Life— a sonnet . 256 
Trees of the Garden— a sonnet . 270 

Troy Town 19 

True Woman— three sonnets . 254 
Untimely Lost— a sonnet . . 300 
Vain Virtues— a sonnet . . . 268 
Vase of Life— a sonnet . . 273 
Venetian Pastoral, A— a sonnet .153 
Venus Verticordia — a sonnet . 159 

— Victrix— a sonnet . . . 243 
Verona, Dante at ... 56 
Villon, Francois, Translations 

from 133 

Vita Nuova, On the— a sonnet . 162 
Wellington's Funeral . . .108 
White-ship, The ... . 192 
Willow-wood— four sonnets . 251 
Wine of Circe, The— a sonnet . 155 
Winged Hours— a sonnet . . 239 
Winter — a sonnet .... 299 
Without her— a sonnet . . 253 
Woodspurge, The .... 150 
Words on Window-pane— a sonnet 298 
World's Worth . . . .111 
Young Firwood, A . . . 151 
Youth and Change, Sonnets on . 227 

— and Lordship .... 141 
Youth's Antiphony— a sonnet . 233 

— Spring-tribute— a sonnet . 233 



427 



Rossetti 
Rural 



Rossi, Properzia - Hem. 163 

Rosslyn inn, To landlady of - - - - Burns 179 

Rotha, my spiritual child ! _"__■_ Wor. 245 

Rotherhain, Thomas, c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 556 

Rotterdam, Lines composed at - - - - Hood 325 
Rough, sergeant, Letters to - - White 104, 125, 141 

— wind that moanest loud -__.-_ She. 447 
Round his heart one strangling golden hair Ros. 265 

— thee, alas, no shadows move ! - . - - Rog. 235 

— Thur low's head in early youth - - - Cow. 390 
Rous, John, Ode to. (Milton.) - - - Cow. 593 
Roushan Beg, Leap of - - Lon. 377 
Rousillon, Countess of, c. in All's Well - Sha. 254 
Rousseau, Jean Jacques ----- Sch. 40 

Lines by ----- - Byron 132 

Rousseau — Voltaire — our Gibbon — and De 

Stael ------- Byron 264 

Row at the Oxford arms - - - Hood 434 

— brothers, row, the stream runs fast - Moore 198 

— gently here ------ Moore 530 

Rowe, Nicholas, Epitaph for - Pope 344 

Royal George, Loss of the - Cow. 414 

— in splendor went down the day - - Hem. 175 

— prayer -------- Goe. 208 

Rubies -------- Erne. 188 

Ruby wine is drunk by knaves - - - Erne. 231 

Rude is this edifice and thou hast seen - Wor. 466 

Rudely thou wrongest my dear heart's desire Spe. 688 

Rudiger, c. in House of Aspen - - - Scott 562 

Rugby, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - - Sha. 42 

Ruggiero and Angelica,'' For — a sonnet - Ros. 154 

Ruin, Ode to ------ Burns 82 

Ruined maid's lament, The— a song - - Burns 289 

— palace, The ------- Mer. 455 

Ruins of Italica, The Bry. 257 

— of Rome. (By Bellary.) - Spe. 677 

— of time -------- Spe. 572 

Ruisseaux, Robert, Elegy on death of - Burns 38 

RuleBrittania! ... - Tho. 473; Fav. 334 

— of life, The — an epigram - Goe. 223 
Rules for behavior ------ Gol. 421 

— for monarchs — an epigram - Goe. 326 

— for raising the devil ----- Gol. 422 
Ruling passion conquers reason still - - Pope 246 

— passion strong in death - Pope 231 
Rumor, the presenter, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - Sha. 409 
Run ! — run for St. Clement's engine ! - - Hood 569 

Runaway slave, The - Bro. 145 

Rural architecture Wor. 85 

— ceremony — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 378 



Rural 42S 

Rural illusions ------ Wor. 156 

Russia, French army in — a sonnet - - - Wor. 283 

— Power of ------ Cam. 242 

Russian assembly, Rules to be observed at - Gol. 500 

— fugitive, The ------ Wor. 461 

Rusticus, ex malo sapidissima poma - - Mil. 533 

Ruth ------ Hood 148; Wor. 176 

— On passages in ----- - Wes. 262 

Rutland, Earl of (Edmund), c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 Sha. 526 

Ryan. Indian jasmine flower - - - Flo. 122 

Rydal, Composed at — a sonnet - Wor. 319 

— In the woods of — a sonnet - Wor. 243 

— mere, By side of ----- - Wor. 392 

Rykman's, Andrew, prayer - - - - Whi. 281 

Rylstone, White doe of - - - - - Wor. 334 

S.; C, To- - - Whi. 199 

S. ; G. L. - - Whi. 338 

S. ; H., In memory of Hoi. 232 

S. H., To,— a sonnet Wor. 230 

Saadi -------- Erne. 114 

Sabbath evening. (Geo. D. Prentice.) - - Flo. 385 

— morning at sea ------ Bro. 109 

— morning in the country. (Bailey.) - - Fav. 258 

— scene, A - - Whi. 168 

— The -------- Wil. 66 

Sabled by the solar beam - Moore 53 

Sabrina, a nymph, c. in Comus - Mil. 434 

— fair — a song - Mil. 458 

Sacheverel — a sonnet Wor. 374 

Sach's poetical mission Goe. 209 

Sacrament — a sonnet ------ Wor.' 377 

Sacred goddess, mother earth - - - She. 429 

— heart, The - - Pro. 363 

— marble, safely keep ----- Her. 308 

— religion ! ' ' mother of form and fear " - - Wor. 330 

— songs Moore 339 

Sacrifice, Perfect. (Mme. Guy on.) - - - Cow. 632 

— of Abraham ------ wil. 12 

-The -------- Her. 107 

Sad bird of night, what sorrows call thee forth Burns 125 

— lot, to have no hope !----- Col. 165 

— Mayflower ! watched by winter stars - Whi. 211 

— solitary Thought, who keep'st thy vigils White 234 

— thoughts, avaunt ! Wor. 331 

— thy tale, thou idle page - - - Burns 106 
Sadly as some old mediaeval knight - - Lon. 415 
Sae far awa' — a song ----- Burns 273 

— flaxen were her ringlets - Burns 263 

— merry as we twa hae been, Remarks on Burns 310 



429 %£** 

Safe at anchor in Drontheim bav - - - Lon. 257 

Saga of king Olaf, The - -" - Lon. 247 

Sagamore, The. (B. P. Shillaber.) - - Fav. 194 

Said a people to a poet Bro. 288 

— a sovereign to a note ----- Moore 617 

— Christ our Lord, 1 ' I will go and see - - Low. 96 

— cotton to corn t'other day - - - - Moore 636 

— his highness to Ned with that grim face Moore 327 

— Nestor to his pretty wife - Hood 541 

— secrecy to cowardice — a sonnet - - Wor. 439 
Sail like my pinnace Sha. 45 

— on, sail on - • Moore 2Q2 

— on, O ship of state ----- Lon. 126 
Sailing beyond seas ------ Ing. 348 

— in a boat at evening ----- Wor. 21 

— of the Mayflower ------ Lon. 200 

Sailor boy, The Pro. 131 

— boy, The Ten. 387 

— The ------- Eog. 232 

Sailor's apology for bow-legs - Hood 369 

— mother, The ------ Wor. 113 

Saimpi, Lord of, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 232 

Saint Agnes ------- Ten. 106 

— Agnes' eve — ah, bitter chill it was ! - - Keats 185 

— seducing gold ------- Sha. 714 

St. Anthony, Temptation of - - - - Hoi. 181 

— Augustine, Ladder of - Lon. 212 

— Bernard, Great ------ Eog. 15 

— Botolph's town ! Hither across the plains - Lon. 383 

— Castine, Baron of Lon. 288 

— Catherine of Ledbury — a sonnet - - - Wor. 239 

— Cecilia's day — a song - - Dry. 533 ; Fav. 101 

— Cecilia's eve, Ode for - - Hood 469 ; Pope 351 

— Cloud -------- Scott 394 

— George that swinged the dragon - - - Sha. 337 

— Helena, island of, Ode to - - - - Byron 240 

— Helena's island, Hymn at Whi. 285 

— Herbert's island, Inscription on - - Wor. 469 

— Irvyne's tower - She. 557 

— James' lodge, Farewell t,o — a song - - Burns 201 

— John, c. in Charles the First - - - She. 484 

— John - - - Whi. 32 

— John, Eve of Scott 346 

— John, Knight of ----- Whi. 81 

— John de Matha, Mantle of - - - - Whi. 314 

— John, Vale of ----- - Scott 230 

— John whose love indulged my labors - - Pope 287 

— John's, Cambridge — a sonnet - - - Lon. 384 

— John's wort, Symbolism of - - - - Flo. 12 

— Just, c. in Fall of Robespierre - - - Col. 382 



£v 430 

St. Just, Lord of, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 232 

— Leonard's, On the view from - - - Cam. 269 

— Mark, Legend of ----- - Whi. 142 

— Mark's place, Venice ----- Bog. 45 

— Maurice, Abbot of, c. in Manfred - Byron 87 

— Patrick, slave to Milcho of the herds - Whi. 266 

— Paul, For opening of church in - - - Whi. 394 

— Paul's, Cross of - - - - - - Hood 516 

— Peter sat by the celestial gate - - Byron 210 

— Peter's, In sight of — a sonnet - - - Wor. 314 

— Senanus and the lady - - - Moore 219 

— Simeon Stylites ------ Ten. 78 

— Swithin's chair ------ Scott 392 

— Valentine's day, Sonnet for - Hood 183 

— Valentine's day. See also Valentine. 

Sainted Juliet ! dearest name ! - - - - Ten. 465 

Saints — a sonnet ------ Wor. 367 

Sa'is, Veiled statue of ----- s cn . 185 

Saith the book : Count not as dead - P. of F. 129 

— the perspicuous book - - - P. of F. 66 
Saki Nameh. (Divan, ix.) - - - - Goe. 380 

Sakontala— an antique Goe. 271 

Salad, The, by Virgil Cow. 545 

Salanio, c. in Merchant of Venice - - - Sha. 181 

Salarino, c. in Merchant of Venice - - Sha. 181 

Salerio, c. in Merchant of Venice - - - Sha. 181 

Sale of the tools, The ----- Moore 334 

Salisbury, Earl of, c. in King John - - - Sha. 332 

c. in Richard ii. Sha. 356 

c. in Henry v. ----- Sha. 439 

c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 

Salisbury plain, Incidents upon - - - Wor. 32 

Sally Brown, Faithless ----- Hood 328 

Salsillo's epigram to Milton - Cow. 530 

SalsiUum, Ad ------ Mil. 549 

Salsillus, To. (Milton.) ----- Cow. 582 

Salviati, Cardinal, c. in Michelangelo - - Lon. 450 

Samaritan embassadors, cs. in Jud. Maccabseus Lon. 325 

Sampson, c. in Romeo and Juliet - - - Sha. 712 

— (Monkes Tale.) Cha. 456 

Samson Agonistes — a dramatic poem - - Mil. 349 

Samson stark at Dagon's knee - - - - Erne. 281 

Samuel - Ing. 471 

— On passages in books of Wes. 170, 266 
San Bias, Bells of ----- Lon. 411 

— Salvador, Church of - - - Wor. 298 

— Silvestro, c. in Michelangelo - - - Lon. 419 
Sand, George, To — a sonnet - Bro. 88, 89 

— Martins - Ing. 216 

— of desert in hour-glass Lon. 130 



431 



St. 
Say 



Sandalphon Lon. 225 

Sandoval, c. in Night Scene - Col. 156 

Sands, Lord, c. in Henry viii. - - - Sha. 592 

— o' Dee, The. (C. Kingsley.) - Fav. 411 

Sandy's ghost - Pope 383 

Santa Filomena Lon. 222 

— Teresa's book-mark ----- Lon. 340 
Sanxere, Lord of, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 232 
Sappho to Phaon— a translation - - - Pope 429 
Sapping a solemn creed with solemn sneer Byron 314 

Sara, To - Col. 33, 53 

Saragossa ! — a sonnet Wor. 279 

Sardis -------- Cow. 56 

Sarolta, Lady, c. in Zapolya - Col. 250 

Satire, Fifth, of Horace - - - - - Cow. 524 

— Ninth, of Horace - - - - ■ - - Cow. 529 

— on the Dutch ------ Dry. 44 

— or sense ! can Sporus feel - Pope 273 
Satires -------- p pe 263 

— Epilogue to the ------ Pope 319 

— my weapon, but I'm too discreet - - Pope 280 

— of Dr. John Donne ------ Pope 496 

— of Horace imitated ----- Pope 277 
Satirical and humorous poems - - - Moore 608 
Saturday afternoon - Wil. 93 
Saturninus, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 
Satyr and my muse ----- s c h. 328 
Saul -------- Byron 193 

— Song of - Byron 192 

Sauntering along the street one day - - Cow. 529 

Save, Jesus, save ! my hour is near - - Wes. 107 

— me alike from foolish pride - Pope 222 

— that to die, I leave my love alone - - Sha. 1036 

— ye, sirs, save ye ! I am in a hopeful way - Dry. 506 
Savella, c. in The Cenci ----- She. 268 
Saviour, who ready art to hear - - - Wes. 87 
Savoyard's return, The ----- White 331 
Saw ye Johnnie Cummin, " Remarks on - Burns 295 

— ye my Maggie Burns 297 

— yemyPhely? — a song - Burns 265 

— ye nae my Peggy? Remarks on - - Burns 296 

— ye the blazing star? - -Hem. 246 

— you the weird sisters ----- Sha. 802 
Sa west thou that light ? " - White 366 
Sawyer, William. Through the fields - Flo. 125 
Saxon conquest — a sonnet - Wor. 356 

— monasteries — a sonnet - - Wor. 359 

— war-song. (Ivanhoe.) Scott 421 

Say, cruel Iris, pretty rake - - - - Gol. 127 

— God, say lord of all ! - - - - P. of F. 65 



Schiller 432 

Say " He is God alone - - - - -P. of F. 133 

— I am here ! oh, if she pardons me - I. S. S. 38 

— is it day, is it dusk in thy bower - - Eos. 148 

— Lord, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 496 

— lord of all, to thee - - - - - P. of F. 160 

— lovely youth, that dost my heart commend Pope 429 

— not good-night, but in some brighter - Fav. 422 

— not the poet dies ! ----- Hoi. 274 

— not 'tis fruitless, nature's holy tear - - Hem. 264 

— over again and yet once over - - - Bro. 158 

— sages, what's the charm on earth - - Burns 188 

— saint John, who alone peruse - Pope 516 

— shall my little bark attendant sail - - Pope 220 

— sparkling streamlet, whither thou - - Goe. 120 

— tell me true what is the doleful cause - Tho. 455 

— that thou didst forsake me for some fault — 

a sonnet ------- Sha. 1039 

— the world is a nettle ; disturb it, it stings - Mer. 32 

— what is honor?— a sonnet - Wor. 279 

— what remains when hope is fled ? - - - Rog. 240 

— what shall be our sport to-day? - - Moore 529 

— where is now that glorious race - - - Sch. 229 

— which immortal merits - Goe. 166 

— who is he around our mountain winds Dante 167 

— who, when age on age has rolled away - Rog. 301 

— ye apostate and profane _--.__ Cow. 39 

— ye far-traveled clouds, far-seeing hills - Wor. 384 
Says the pipe to the snuff box, " I can't under- 
stand ------- Cow. 406 

Scales, Lord. c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - - Sha. 496 

Scamander, Battle in river - Iliad 419 

Scanderbeg -------- Lon. 309 

— king of Epirots, Sonnets on - - - Spe. 703 
Scarce could the parting ocean close - - Hoi. 134 

— had the rosy morning raised her head - Vir. 366 

— had the solemn sabbath-bell - - - - Whi. 168 

— has the fever so chilly of Gallomania - Sch. 265 
Scarcely, I think ; yet it indeed - - - Ros. 154 
Scarus, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 
Scattering like birds escaped the fowler's nest Wor. 370 
Scene — a back parlor in a certain square - Hoi. 39 

— in a Dalecarlian mine Hem. 378 

— in Venice — a sonnet ----- Wor. 362 

— on the banks of the Hudson - - - - Bry. 115 
Scenes favorable to meditation. (Mme. 

Guy on.) - Cow. 645 

— in Gethsemane ------ Wil. 61 

— of my youth ! awake its slumbering fire ! - Hoi. 13 
Scepticism. See Skepticism. 

Schaffhausen, Fall of— a sonnet - - - Wor. 371 



433 



Sc 



'Sille 



Scheik of Sinai, The 
SCHILLER, JOHN C. F. 

Actseon 

Album, In an . . .285, 

Alpine Hunter, The 

Amalia 

Antique to the Northern Wanderer 

Antiques at Paris 

Archimedes and the Student 

Artifice, The .... 

Artists, The 

Bacchus in the Pillory- 
Bad Monarchs, The 

Bards of Olden Time . 

Battle, The 

Bell, Song of the . 

Best State Constitution . 

Bookseller's Announcement 

Bowring, E. A., Translator's Apol- 
ogy 

Breadth and Depth 

Carthage 

Cassandra 

Celebrated Woman, The . 

Ceres, Lament of ... . 

Child in the Cradle . 

Circle of Nature .... 

Columbus 

Commencement of the new Cent- 
ury 

Common Fate 

Conflict, The .... 

Confucius, Proverbs of . 

Connecting Medium, The . 

Count of Hapsburgh 

Cranes of Ibycus .... 

Danaides, The 

Dance, The 

Dangerous Consequences 

Death, Dedication to . 

Departure from Life 

Dialogue 

Dithyramb 

Diver, The 

Division of the Earth 

Dragon, Fight with the 

Earth, Division of the . 

Eberhard, Count . 

Elegy on Death of Young Man . 

Eleusinian Festival 

Elysium 

Emma, To 

Epitaphs: Here lies a man cut off 

— Physiognomist, On a 

Epithalamium 

Error, Words of . 

Evening • . 

Expectation 

— and Fulfillment .... 
Fairest Apparition 

Faith, Words of ... . 
False impulse to study 
Farewell to the Reader . 
Fates, To the .... 

Father, The 

Favor of the Moment 
Feast of Victory .... 
Female Judgment 
Fight with the Dragon . 
Flowers, The . 
28 



VON, Poems of ; 

312 

; v 

115 



Ayt. 194. 



Fortune .... 


. 235 


— and Wisdom . 


53 


Forum of Woman . 


. 260 


Fountain of Second Youth 


. 259 


Four Ages of the World 


. 118 


Fridolin .... 


. 173 


Friends, To my 


. 120 


Friendship .... 
Fugitive, The . 


41 


. 44 


Funeral Phantasy- 


20 


Genius .... 


. 239,263 


— with inverted torch 


. 260 


German Comedy 


. 265 


— Faith 


. 224 


— Genius .... 


. 263 


— Muse 


. 221 


Germany and her Princes 


. 264 


Glove, The . . 


. 1S3 


Gods of Greece 


. 82 


Goethe, To ... . 


. 282 


Goodness and Greatness 


. 262 


Greatness of the World 


34 


Grecian Genius 


. 285 


Greekism .... 


. 265 


Groaner of Wurtemberg 


. 54 


Group from Tartarus . 


42 


Guides of Life, The 


. 246 


Hapsburgh, Count of . 


. 180 


Hector's Farewell . 


. 19 


Helicon, Anecdote of . 


. 305 


Herculaneum, Pompeii and 


. 225 


Hero and Leander 


. 145 


Highest, The ... 


. 249 


Homerides, The . 


. 268 


Honorable, The 


. 259 


Honors 


. 248 


Hope 


. 221 


Hostage, The 


. 155 


Human Action 


. 262 


— Knowledge 


. 247 


Hymn to the Eternal 


. 318 


Hypochondriacal Pluto 


. 307 


Ibycus, Cranes of . 


. 140 


Ideal and Life, The 


. 189 


— of Woman . 


. 261 


Ideals, The .... 


. 109 


Iliad, The 


. 228 


Immortality 


249, 313 


Immutable, The 


. 249 


Impulses, The 


. 262 


Infanticide, The 


. 31 


Invincible Armada, The . 


77 


Jeremiads 


. 269 


Joan of Arc .... 


. 231 


Journalists and Minos . 


. 297 


Joy, Hymn to 


74 


Juno. (Semele.) 


. 56 


Jupiter. (Semele.) 


57 


Kant and his commentators 


. 270 


Klopstock and Wieland 


. 303 


Knight of Toggenburg . 


. 164 


Knights of Malta . 


. 223 


Knowledge 


. 270 


— Human .... 


. 247 


Lament of Ceres 


. 129 


Laura, Poems to . 


22, 26, 313 


— To, at the Harpsichord 


. 24 


Lawgivers, To 


. 259 



Schiller 
Scott 



434 



231, 345 

. 112 

. 223 

. 315 

. 344 

. 102 

. 28 

. 222 

57 



Leander, Hero and . . . .145 
Life, Departure from 

— Guides of 34b 

— Ideal and 189 

— Poetry of 281 

Light and Warmth . . . 245 

Longing 107 

Love and Desire . 

— Triumph of . 
Maid of Orleans . 
Maiden's Lament 
Malta, Knights of 
Man's Dignity . 
" Mary Stuart," Song from 
Meeting, The . 
Melancholy (to Laura) 
Merchant, The 
Mercury. (Semele.) . 

Messiod, The 315 

Metaphysician, The . . . 275 

Minna, To 47 

Mole, The 322 

Moment, The 265 

Monument of Moor the Robber 322 
Moor's Song. (From The Robbers.) 337 
Moral Poet, The .... 269 

Moralist, To a 53 

Mountain Song . . . .114 
Muse's Revenge, The . . . 305 
Nadir, Zenith and . . . 248 
Nadowessian Death-lament . . 123 

Neenia 231 

Naturalists and Transcendental 

Philosophers . . .262 
Nature, Circle of . . . .259 

Nuptial Ode 284 

Odysseus 222 

Orleans, Maid of . . . . 231 
Parables and Riddles . . .193 
Parallel, The .... 304 
Paris, Antiques at . . . . 229 
Peasants, The .... 326 
Pegasus in Harness . . . 277 
Phantasm to Laura ... 22 
Philosophers, The . . .267, 275 
Philosophical Egotist . . 241 

Pilgrim, The 108 

Plague, The 321 

Playing Child 232 



Plays: Semele in two scenes 

Poetry of Life .... 

Polycrates, Ring of 

Pompeii and Herculaneum . 

Power of Song 

— of Woman .... 

Praise of Woman 

Preface to suppressed Poems 

Pi-esent, The 

Proverbs of Confucius . 

Proselytizers, To 

Punch song .... 

Puppet-show of life . 



57 
281 
138 
225 
217 
234 
219 
295 



. 244 
. 264 
120,122 
. 279 



Quirl. 

Rapture (to Laura) 

Reproach (to Laura) 

Resignation . 

Riddles and Parables 

Ring of Polycrates 

Rivers, The 

Robbers, The, Extracts from . 

Rousseau, Jean Jacques 

Sais, Veiled Statue of . 

Satyr and my Muse 

Secret, The . 

— of Reminiscence 
Semele — a dramatic piece 
Sexes, The 

Shakespeare's Ghost . 
Simple Peasant, The 
Song of the Bell . 
Sower, The 
Spinoza, Baruch . 
Spring, Ode to 
Sublime Subject, The 
Sunday Children, The . 
Suppressed poems 
Tartarus, Group from . 
Tell, William 
Thekla, a spirit voice . 
Theophania . 
Thoughts on Oct. 1, 1781 
Toggenburg, Knight of 
Translator's Apology 
Trifles . . 
Triumph of Love . 
Trust in Immortality . 
Turandot. Riddle from . 
Two Paths of Virtue . 
Unknown Maiden . 
Veiled Statue of Sais . 
Virtue of Woman . 

— Two paths of . 
Votive tablets . 
Walk, The . 

— to the Iron Foundry . 
Wallenstein's Camp, Songs 
Weimar, Prince of . 
Wieland, Klopstock and 
William Tell, Songs from 
Winter Night, The 
Woman, Forum of . 

— Ideal of . 

— Power of 

— Praise of . 

— Virtue of 
Words of Error . 
Words of Faith 
Wurtemberg, Groaner of 
Wiirtemburger, The 
Young Friend, To a . 

— Lady's Album, In a . 
Youth at the Brook . 
Zenith and Nadir . 
Zeus to Hercules . 



from 



Schiller, John C. F. Von. Children of the 

sun's first glancing ----- Flo. 521 

Death of ------ Bry. 184 

To — a sonnet ------ Col. 97 

— that hour I would have wished - - Col. 97 

Schiller's skull, On seeing ----- Goe. 207 



435 



Schiller 
Scott 



Schiller's song of the bell— an epilogue 

Schipmannes tale, The - 

Scholar and carpenter ----- 

— and his mistress 

— of Thebet ben Khorat 

School-close, At ------ ■ 

— days, In ------- 

Schoolmaster, Epitaph on a 

Schools -------- 

Schwyte, Town of — a sonnet 
Science moves but slowly - 

— Sonnet to ------- 

Scio, Voice of ------ - 

Scorn not the sonnet ----- 

— to point his slow - 

Scorning the base degrees -.---■• 
Scotch bard, On a - 

— distillers, Letter to - 

— drink -------- 

— reviewers, English bards and 

Scotia, quad frigente jaces porrecta sub Arcto 
Scotiam Protrepticon ad pacem, Ad 
Scotland, In the Highlands of 
Scots, Island of the ------ 

— wha hae wi' Wallace bled - 
Scott, Jeannie, Epigram to 

Scott, Mrs., of Wauchope House, Epistle to 
SCOTT, SIR WALTER, Poems of: 



Goe. 409 

• Cha. 389 
Ing. 47 

- Dry. 548 

Wil. 201 

Whi. 416 

Whi. 350 

Burns 179 

Cra. 477 

• Wor. 297 

Ten. 92 

Poe 130 

Hem. 310 

Wor. 233 

Sha. 902 

• Sha. 769 
Burns 89 
Burns 507 
Burns 65 
Byron 177 

Her. 576 

Her. 576 

Rog. 247 

Ayt. 100 

Burns 257 

Burns 186 

Burns 166 



Ahriman. (Talisman.) . . . 449 
Albert Graeme .... 37 
Alexandre, Mons., Lines to . " . 447 
Alice Brand— a ballad . . 136 

Allen-a-Dale 202 

Ancram Moor, Battle of . . 655 
AnnotLyle's Songs . . . 419 
Appeal, The, Epilogue to . . 415 
Ariosto, Translation from . . 415 
Auchindrane— a tragedy . . 489 
Avenel, White Lady of . . .424 
Badajos, Plain of ... 384 
Bangor's March, Monks of . . 412 
Bard's Incantation . . . 374 
Barefooted Friar. (Ivanhoe.) . 420 
Battle, The. (Marmion.) . 95 

— of Ancram Moor . . .655 

— of Beal, an Duine . . .155 

— of Sempach 365 

Black Knight's Song. (Ivanhoe.) 422 

— Prince, To the. (Bob Roy.) . 414 
Blondel, Song of ... . 450 
Bloody Vest. (Talisman.) . 450 
Boat Song. (Lady of the Lake.) 125 
Bold Dragoon, The ... 384 

Border BaUad 428 

Bothwell Castle .... 458 
Bothwell's Pocket-book, In . .406 
Bridal of Triermain, The . . 230 

— Song. (Waverley.) . . .390 
Brignall banks are wild . . 199 



Brooch of Lorn .... 
Buccleuch, Duke of, Letter to . 
Cadyow Castle .... 
Camp, The. (Marmion.) . 
Carle, now the King's come . 
Castle, The. (Marmion.) . 

— of the Seven Shields . 
Cavalier, The— a song . 
Chant over the Dead 
Characters: Bavaria, Duke of. 

House of Aspen 

— Bertram of Ebersdorf " 

— Chandos, a noble. Halidon Hill 

— Cockledemoy, a masker. 

Doom of Devorgoil 

— Conrad, page of honor. 

House of Aspen 

— De Vipont, Adam. Halidon Hill 

— Dunbar, Earl of. Auchindrane 

— Durward, a palmer. 

Doom of Devorgoil 

— Edward the Third. Halidon Hill 

— Eleanor, wife of Oswald. 

Doom of Devorgoil 

— Flora, dtr. of Oswald " 

— George of Aspen. 

House of Aspen 

— Gertrude, niece of Isabella. 

House of Aspen 

— Gifford, a courtier. 

Auchindrane 



414 
349 

73 
440 

48 
327 
215 
455 



502 
4(52 



524 



524 
524 



562 



Scott 



436 



Characters: Gordon, a chief. 

Halidon Hill 46a 

— Graham, a private. 

Auchindrane 494 

— Gullcranmer, a student. 

Doom of Devorgoil 524 

— Henry of Aspen. 

House of Aspen 562 

— Hildebrand . . Auchindrane 494 

— Hob Hattely, a trooper. 

Halidon HiU 462 

— Hugo, a squire. House of Aspen 562 

— Isabel, a girl of six. 

Auchindrane 494 

— Isabella . . House of Aspen 562 

— Jenkins, a private. 

Auchindrane 494 

— Johnston, a chief. Halidon Hill 462 

— Katleen, niece of Eleanor. 

Doom of Devorgoil 524 

— Lancelot Blackthorn. " 524 

— Lennox, a chief. Halidon Hill 462 

— Leonard, a ranger. 

Doom of Devorgoil 524 

— Lindesay, a baron. 

MacDuff 's Cross 484 

— Lindesay, a chief. Halidon Hill 462 

— Ludovic, Father. 

House of Aspen 562 

— MacLellan, Neil. Auchindrane 494 

— Marion MacLellan. " 494 

— Martin, a squire. 

House of Aspen 562 

— Maurice Berkeley, a baron. 

Mac Duff's Cross 484 

— Maxwell, a chief. Halidon Hill 462 

— Mure, John, a baron. 

Auchindrane 493 

— Mure, Philip. " 493 

— Ninian, a monk. 

MaeDuffs Cross 484 

— Oswald, a baron. 

Doom of Devorgoil 524 

— Owlspiegle, a masker. " 524 

— Percy, a noble. Halidon Hill 462 

— Peter, a domestic. 

House of Aspen 562 

— Prior of Maison Dieu. 

Halidon Hill 462 

— Quentin Blane, a youth. 

Auchindrane 494 

— Regent of Scotland. 

Halidon Hill 462 

— Reynald, Swinton's squire. 

Halidon Hall 462 

— Reynold, a follower. 

House of Aspen 562 

— Ribaumont, a noble. 

Halidon Hill 462 

— Roderic, a count. 

House of Aspen 562 

— Ross, a chief. Halidon Hill 462 

— Rudiger, a baron. 

House of Aspen 562 

— Spirit of Lord Erick. 

Doom of Devorgoil 524 

— Sutherland, a chief. 

Halidon Hill 462 

— Swinton, a chief. " 462 

— Waldhave, a monk. 

MaeDuffs Cross 484 



Characters : Walthamstow, Ab- 
bot of . . Halidon HiU 462 

— Wickerd, a f ollower. 

House of Aspen 562 

— William, a baron. " 562 

— Williams, a private. 

Auchindrane 494 
Chase, The. (Lady of the Lake.) 110 

Cheviot 460 

Claud Halcro and Noma. (Pirate.) 434 

— Halcro's song. (Pirate.) . 433 

verses. (Pirate.) . . 437 

Cleveland's Songs. (Pirate.) . 436 
Combat, The ..... 142 
Convent. The. (Marmion.) . 56 
Coronach. (Lady of the Lake.) . 130 

County Guy 444 

Court, The. (Marmion.) . . 82 
Crusader's Return, The. (Ivan- 
hoe.) 420 

Cypress Wreath, The . . .214 
Dance of Death, The . . .395 
Davie Gellatley's Songs. (Waver- 

ley.) 391 

DeWilton's History. (Marmion.) 96 
Death of Keeldar . . . .447 
Don Roderick, Vision of . .162 
Donald Caird's come again . . 416 
Donald Dhu, Pibroch of . .400 
Doom of Devorgoil— a play . . 523 
Duet: Black Knight and Wamba 422 
Dunois, Romance of 397 

Dying Bard, The .... 375 

— Gypsy's Dirge . . . .399 
Edward, the Black Prince, To . 414 
Elspeth's Ballad . . . .403 
Epigraphs. See Mottoes. 
Epilogue to drama founded on 

" St. Ronan's Well " . 445 

— to " The Appeal " . . .415 
Epitaphs: Erskine, Mrs., On . 417 

— Lichfield Cathedral, Monument 



Erl-king, The 371 

Ettrick Forest's mountains dun 43.) 
Eve of Saint John, The . . .346 
Farewell, The— a song . . 216 

— to Mackenzie .... 394 

— to the Muse. (Pirate.) . . 440 
Field of Waterloo, The . . .304 
Fire-king. The . . . .361 

Fitztraver 38 

Flodden Field, Tale of . (Marmion.) 42 
Flora Maclvor's Song. (Waver- 

ley.) 392 

For a' that an' a' that . . . 386 
Foray, The. (Talisman.) . . 452 
Frederick and Alice . . . 364 
French, Song from the . . 397 
From the brown crest of Newark 398 
Funeral Hymn. (Ivanhoe.) . 423 
Gathering, The. (Lady of the 

Lake.) 127 

German, Ballads from the . . 355 
Glee for King Charles . . 454 
Glencoe, Massacre of . 385 
Glendenning, Edward, To . . 427 
Glenfinlas, or Lord Ronald's Coro- 
nach 342 

Goldthread's Song . . . .431 
Gray Brother, The . . . 352 



437 



Scott 



to 



Guard-room, The. Lady of the 

Lake.) 

Halbert, To. (Monastery.) 
Halbert's Invocation 
Halidon Hill— a dramatic sketch 
Happiness, Search after 
Harold . 

— Harf ager, Song of. (Pirate.) 

— the Dauntless . 
Harp of the North, farewell . 

— The— a song . 
Hazeldean. Jock of 
Health to Lord Melville . 

Helvellyn 

Hither we come— a song . 
Hostel, The. (Marmion.) 
House of Aspen— a tragedy 
Hunting Song 
Hymn for the Dead 

— to the Virgin . 
Inscription for monument 

George Scott 

Isla, Maid of 

Island, The. (Lady of the Lake.) 
Jock of Hazeldean .... 
Judges of Secret Tribunal, Song 

of 

Juvenile Lines from Virgil 
Keeldar, Death of . 
Kemble's farewell address 
Lachlan, War-song of . 
Lady Heron's Song— Lochinvar 

— of the Lake, The 

Lament 

Lay of Poor Louise 

— of the Imprisoned Huntsman 

— of the Last Minstrel 
Letter, The. (Rokeby.) . 

— in verse 

Lochinvar— Lady Heron's Song . 
Lord of the Isles, The . 

— Ronald's Coronach . 
Lucy Ashton's Song . 
Lullaby of an Infant Chief . 
Lyulph*s Tale .... 
MacDonald, Ronald, To 
MacDuff 's Cross— scenes of a play 
Macgregor's Gathering . 
Mackenzie, Farewell to 
Macrimmon's Lament . 
Madge Wildfire's Songs 

Maid of Isla 

— of Neidpath, The . 

— of Toro, The .... 
Major BeUenden's Song . 
Marmion— a tale of Flodden Field 
Massacre of Glencoe . 
Mermaids and Mermen, Song of. 

(Pirate.) .... 
Minstrelsy of Scottish Border 
Monks of Bangor's March . 
Moon, To the— a song . 
Mortham's History 
Mottoes: (Abbot.) 

— (Anne of Geierstein.) . 

— (Antiquary.) . 

— (Betrothed.) 

— (Black Dwarf.) 

— (Bride of Lammermoor.) 

— (Castle Dangerous.) 

— (Count Robert of Paris.) 



Mottoes: (Fair Maid of Perth.) 

— (.Fortunes of Nigel.) . 

— (Ivanhoe.) 

— (Kenilworth.) 

— (Monastery.) . 

— (Old Mortality.) . 

— (Peveril of the Peak.) 

— (Pirate.) 

— (Quentin Durward.) 

— (Rob Roy.) . 

— (St. Ronan's Well.) . 

— (The Talisman.) . 

— (Woodstock.) . 
Neidpath, Maid of . 
Nicholas, Grand-duke . 
Noble Moringer 
Nora's Vow . 
Norman Horse-shoe 

— the Forester's SOng 
Norman's Incantations . 

— Song. (Pirate.) 
O, Bold and True . 

— Brignall banks are wild 

— say not, my love 
Oak tree, To an . 
One hour with thee 
Orphan Maid, The 
Palmer, The . 
Pharos Loquitur . 
Pibroch of Donald Dhu . , 
Pitt Club, Song for the 
Plain of Badajos . 
Plays : AuciJndrane— a tragedy 

— Doom of Devorgoil . 

— Halidon Hill .... 

— House of Aspen . 

— MacDuff 's Cross— a fragment 
Poacher, The .... 
Prologue to the " Family Legend 
Prophecy, The 

Quest of Sultaun Solimaun 

Rebecca's Hymn. (Ivanhoe.) 

Reiver s Wedding, The 

Return to Ulster 

Resolve, The . 

Rokeby 

Romance of Dunois . 

Saint Cloud 

— John, Eve of . 
Vale of . 

— Swithin's Chair 
Saxon War-song. (Ivanhoe.) 
Scottish Border Minstrelsy 
Search after Happiness 
Sempach, Battle of 
Setting Sun, On the 
Shepherd's Tale, The . 
Soldier, wake. (.Betrothed.) 
Soldier's Song 
Song of the Tempest. (Pirate.) 
Sub-prior, To the 

Sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill 
Tempest, Song of the. (Pirate 
Thunder-storm, On a 

Time 

Translation from Ariosto 
Triermain, Bridal of . 
Troubadour, The . 
Truth of Woman— a song . 
Twist ye, twine ye . 
Ulster, Return to 



Scott AQQ 

See ^ d0 



When the lone pilgrim views 

afar .... 414 

White Lady of Avenel, Songs of 434 

to Mary Avenel . . .427 

— Lady's Farewell ... 428 
Wild Huntsman, The . . .359 
William and Helen— a ballad . 355 
Woman, Trutn of . . . . 449 
Yes, thou may est sigh . . 455 
Zetland fisherman song. (Pirate.) 436 



Vale of Saint John, The . . . 230 

Violet, The 373 

Virgil, Juvenile lines from . . 372 
Visiou of Don Roderick . . 162 
Wandering Willie .... 378 
War-song of Lachian . . . 394 

of Roval Dragoons . . 373 

Waterloo, Field of . .304 

Weirdlaw Hill, Sun upon the . 411 
Wheel the wild dance— a song . 396 

Scott, Sir Walter. Cypress wreath - Flo. 189 

Harebell, The - Flo. 208 

Poet, The— an extract - Fa v. 291 

Setting sun, The Flo. 497 

Toast, The Fav. 309 

Youth Fav. 36 

Scottish border minstrelsy - Scott 357 

— cavalier, Old Ayt. 156 

— river, On revisiting a Cam. 230 

— songs, Eemarks on - - - - - Burns 293 
Scott's departure for Naples - Wor. 383 
Screams round the arch druid's brow - - Wor. 354 
Screw your courage to the sticking place - Sha. 792 
Scriptural hymns Wes. 215 

— passages, Hymns on - - - - - Wes. 231 

— poems - Wil. 7 

Scrivener, Unto his own - - - - Cha. 603 

Scroop, Lord, c. in Henry v. - - - - Sha. 439 

Scroop, Richard, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 1 - Sha. 382 

Scroop, Sir Stephen, c. in Richard ii. - - Sha. 356 

Scylla and Charybdis ----- Odys. 172 

Sea-bathing of his majesty - - Cow. 466 

— captain, friend of Viola, c. in Twelfth Kight Sha. 281 

— change into something rich - - - Sha. 5 

— dialogue, A Hoi. 295 

— dream, A - Whi. 388 

— dreams - Ten. 372 

— fairies, The Ten. 17, 475 

— fight in " Amboyna "— a song - - - Dry. 552 

— hath its pearls -__-_- Lon. 93 

— king's daughter from over the sea - - Ten. 388 

— limits, The Ros. 152 

— mew, The ------- Bro. 72 

— mews in winter time Ing. 226 

— On the. (B.Taylor.)- - - Fav. 144; Mer. 210 

— shore Erne. 207 

— shore, Composed by the - Wor. 394 

— shore, Isle of Man Wor. 402 

— side and the fireside ----- Lon. 121 

— side, By the Wor. 391 

— side, Composed at the Wor. 269 

— side songs Mer. 445 

— side walk - - Bro. 71 



439 g£« 

Sea song, A ------ - Ing. 141 

— spell, The - Hood 364; Ros. 302 

— Vision of the She. 461 

— voyage, The— an ode ----- G- e. 175 

— weed Lon. 86 ; Low. 338 

Seal, On receiving a - Cam. 194 

Search after happiness ----- Scott 406 

— The ------ Her. 2Q2 ■ Low. 6Q 

Searcher of hearts, to thee I fly - - - Wes. 124 

Searching auld wives 1 barrels - - - Burns 179 

Season of general rest ----- White 336 

— of mists and mellow f ruitf ulness - - Keats 236 

— of my purest pleasure - Cow. 640 

— The - - - - - - - - -Hood 327 

— your admiration for awhile - - - Sha. 814 
Seasons, The ----- Tho. 7; Fav. 119 

— The. (James Grahame.) - - - - Fav. 118 

— Thoughts on the - - - - - - Wor. 430 

Seated one day at the organ - - - - Pro. 223 

Seathwaite chapel ------ Wor. 330 

Sebastian, c. in The Tempest - - - - Sha. 1 

— brother of Viola, c. in Twelfth Night - - Sha. 281 
Sebus, Johanna — a ballad - Goe. 107 
Secluded from domestic strife - - - - Gol. 123 
Seclusion — a sonnet ----- Wor. 358 
Second angel's story ----- Moore 548 

— battle, The ------ - Iliad 184 

Secounde Nonnes tale Cha. 329 

Secret of reminiscence ----- Sch. 26 

— of the sea --- Lon. 126 

— of the stars ------- Hoi. 121 

— parting — a sonnet ------ Ros. 249 

— The - - - Sch. 104 

Secrets of divine love. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. 633 

Sects and professions in religion - - - Cra. 334 

Secular masque, The ------ Dry. 543 

Secundum artem — an ode - Cow. 48 

Sed nee conjugii signum, Mel vine - - - Her. 572 

Sedge, sweet, Poesy of - Flo. 211 

Seductos innocentes, Ad ----- Her. 577 

See, before us, in our journey - - - Bry. 250 

— from this counterfeit of him - - - Fav. 446 

— he sitteth on his mat Sch. 123 

— how a single rich man ----- Sch. 270 

— how beneath the moonbeams smile - - Moore 106 

— how he strives to rescue - Fav. 60 

— how like billows the couples - - - Sch. 234 

— how the orient dew ----- Flo. 350 

— how the stubborn damsel - - - - Spe. 692 

— how the world its veterans rewards - - Pope 238 



See 
Serene 



440 



See how we hate, how we quarrel - - Sch. 261 

— how yon flaming herald - Hoi. 29 

— how yon glittering wave - Flo. 87 

— in the tender child two beauteous flowerets Sch. 232 

— me no more on earth ----- Wil. 296 

— my lips tremble and my eyeballs - - Pope 116 

— my loved Britons - - - - - Dry. 489 

— sir, here's the grand approach - - - Pope 389 

— that there be no traitors - - Ten. 160 

— the condemned alone within his cell - - Wor. 444 

— the dawn from heaven - Moore 532 

— the fire is sinking low ----- Lon. 320 

— the god of seas attends thee - - - Dry. 555 

— the honeysuckle twine Flo. 132 

— the rivers flowing Pro. 107 

— the rock-born stream Goe. 163 

— the smoking bowl before us - - - Burns 59 

— the wild waste of all-devouring - - Pope 260 

— the young, the rosy spring - - - Moore 46 

— what a lovely shell - - - - - Ten. 234 

— what a rent the envious Casca made - Sha. 778 

— what gay wild flowers deck this earth-built Wor. 386 

— where his difficult way that old man - Wor. 319 

— where the Thames, the purest stream - Cow. 30 

— winter comes to rule the varied year - Tho. 155 

— with a heart full of hope - Sch. 222 

— yon opening flower ----- She. 557 

— yonder badgeman, with that glowing face Cra. 419 

— yonder leafless trees against the sky - Erne. 282 

— you beneath yon cloud so dark - - Moore 203 
Seed-time and harvest ----- Whi. 151 
Seek not the spirit, if it hide - Erne. 80 

— who will delight in fable - Wor. 91 
Seeking of the waterfall - Whi. 404 

— the beloved ------- Cow. 74 

— to find his home ------ Sch. 222 

Seekst thou the highest, the greatest - - Sch. 249 

Seem a saint when most I play - - - Sha. 563 

Seems, madam ! nay, it is - - - - - Sha. 813 

Seeress of the misty Norland - - - - Whi. 167 

Seesaw --------- Mer. 247 

See'st thou my home? Hem. 229 

— thou yon mountain laden with deep snow Cow. 533 

— thou yon .smiling orange? - Goe. 65 

— thou yonder castles gray - Sch. 145 
Seldom he smiles, and smiles in such - - Sha. 766 

— we find,*' says Solomon - Poe 79 
Seleucus, attendant, c. in Antony and Cleopatra Sha. 911 
Self-abasement, Necessity of . (Mme. Guyon.) Cow. 643 

— acquaintance ------- Cow. 79 



J.41 § ee 

tt ^ r - L Serene 

Self and life ------- Eliot 129 

— condemnation Her. 272 

— consecration Wes. 11 

— deceit — a song Goe. 28 

— diffidence. (Mme. Guy on.) - - - Cow. 627 

— knowledge — an epigram - Cow. 610 

— love and truth incompatible - - - Cow. 629 

— love, my liege, is not so vile - Sha. 447 

— love which never rightly understood - Dry. 481 

— study - Low. 346 

— subsisting, The - - - - - - P. of F. 130 

— thy word would fain diminish - Wes. 253 
Selkirk, Alexander, Verses supposed to be by Cow. 425 

Sella - Bry. 268 

Selma, thy halls are silent - Oss. 358 

Selvaggi's epigram to Milton - Cow. 531 

Semedo, From Portuguese of - - - Bry. 151 

Semele — a play ------- Sch. 57 

Semi-centennial of New England Society - Hoi. 136 

Sempach, Battle of ----- - Scott 365 

Sempronius, c. in Titus Andronicus - - Sha. 688 

— a lord, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 
Sending a child to school - Wes. 122 
Senex's soliloquy on his youthful - - Cam. 263 
Sennacherib, Destruction of - Byron 195 
Sense of death is most in apprehension - - Sha. 78 
Sensibility - Burns 139 

— (Eogers.) -------- Fav. 304 

— how charming Burns 139 

Sensitive plant, The - She. 336 ; Flo. 503 

— plant, Poesy of Flo. 108 

Sent to heaven Pro. 261 

— to my account Sha. 818 

Sentiment, A - Hoi. 48, 133 

— and reflection, Poems of - - - - Wor. 412 
Sephardo, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 249 
September. (Shepherd's Calendar.) - - Spe. 550 

— gale, The Hoi. 11 

Sepulcher - Her. 122 

Seraph and poet — a sonnet - Bro. 81 

Seraphim, The Bro. 9 

Seraphina, To Tho. 394 

Serchio, Boat on the She. 475 

Seren, regem., Ad Her. 579 

Serenade -> Low. 4 

— in the Spanish Student Lon. 47 

— The. (SheUey.) Fav. 183 

— The. (From the Spanish.) - Bry. 153 

Serenades - - Hood 179 

Serene and fitted to embrace - Wor. 193 



Sermon 
Shakespeare 



442 



Sermon in a churchyard - Mac. 159 

Sermon of Saint Francis ----- Lon. 362 

Sermons in stones and good in everything - Sha. 210 

Serpents, To the queen of - - - - - Mer. 268 

Servant of God, well done - Mil. 135 

Service is no longer heritage - Sha. 257 

Servile to all the skyey influences - - Sha. 77 

Servilius, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 

Serving no haughty muse, my hands - - Wor. 249 

Sestos to Abydos, After swimming from Byron 243 

Set not thy foot on graves - Erne. 31 

Setting sun. The - - - - - Scott 373 ; Flo. 497 

Settlers. The ------- Pro. 179 

Seven daughters had lord Archibald - - Wor. 148 

— heavens, The P. of F. 85 

— hundred pounds ------ Sha. 42 

— long years has the desert rain - - - Bry. 200 

— maidens neath the midnight - - - Bro. 44 

— sisters, The ------- Wor. 148 

— sleepers, The .___.. Qoe. 387 

— sonnets from Michelangelo - - - Lon. 392 
Seventh battle, The ----- Iliad 357 

Seventy-six - Bry. 166 

Severed shelves ------ p os# 247 

Sewell, Samuel, Prophecy of - - - - Whi. 223 

To, of Melrose - ----- - Whi. 261 

Sexes, The ------- Sch. 232 

Sexton, Martha's dead and gone - - Hoi. 146 

— To a - - - - - - - - Wor. 144 

Sextus Pompeius, c. in Antony and Cleopatra Sha. 911 

Seyton, an officer, c. in Macbeth - - - Sha. 788 

Shade of Theseus, The ----- Hem. 141 

Shadow, a recruit, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - Sha. 409 

— A - - - - - - -Lon. 367; Pro. 230 

— and the light ------ Whi. 234 

Shadowed so long by the storm-cloud - - Hoi. 255 

Shadows to-night have struck more - - Sha. 589 
SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM, Works of: 



All's Well that Ends Well . . 254 
Antony and Cleopatra . . 911 
As You Like It . . . .205 
Comedy of Errors ... 93 

Coriola'nus 654 

Cymbeline 944 

Glossary 1055 

Hamlet 811 

Henry the Fourth, pt. 1 . . 382 
pt. 2 409 

— the Fifth 439 

— the Sixth, pt. 1 . . . 469 

pt. 2 496 

pt. 3 526 

— the Eighth ., ... 592 
Index to characters in the plays 1088 



Index to Familiar Passages 
Julius Caesar 
King John 

— Lear .... 
Lover's Complaint. A . 
Love's Labor's Lost . 
Macbeth .... 
Measure for Measure 
Merchant of Venice 
Merry Wives of Windsor . 
Midsummer-night's Dream 
Much Ado about Nothing 
Othello, the Moor of Venice 
Passionate Pilgrim, The . 
Pericles .... 
Phoenix and the Turtle 



. 107u 

764 

. 332 

847 

. 1047 

135 

. 788 

67 

. 181 

42 

. 161 

111 

. 879 

1050 

. 977 

1034 



443 



Sermon 
Shakespeare 



Rape of Lucrece, The . 
Richard the Second . 

— the Third 

Romeo and Juliet . 

Taming of the Shrew . 

Tempest 

Threnos— an epitaph . 
Timon of Athens 
Titus Andronicus .... 
Troilus and Cressida . 
Twelfth Night . . . . 
Two Gentlemen of Verona 
Venus and Adonis .... 
Winters Tale .... 
Characters: Aaron, a Moor. 

Titus Andronicus 

— Abergavenny, Lord, Henry vhi. 

— Abhorson. an executioner. 

Measure for Measure 

— Abraham, a servant. 

Romeo and Juliet 

— Achilles, a Greek prince. 

Troilus and Cressida 
~- Adam, a servant. 

As You Like It 

— Adrian, a lord . . Tempest 

— Adriana, wife of Antipholus. 

Comedy of Errors 

— JEgeon, a merchant " 

— JEniilia, wife of iEgeon. 

Comedy of Errors 

— jEmilius, a noble Roman. 

Titus Andronicus 

— iEneas, a Trojan commander. 

Troilus and Cressida 

— Agamemnon, a Greek general. 

Troilus and Cressida 

— Agrippa, friend of Caesar. 

Antony and Cleopatra 

— Aguecheek, Sir Andrew. 

Twelfth Night 

— Ajax, a Greek prince. 

Troilus and Cressida 

— Alarbus, son of Tamora. 

Titus Andronicus 

— Albany, Duke of . King Lear 

— Alcibiades,.an Athenian captain 

Timon 6f Athens 

— Alencon, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Alexander, a servant. 

Troilus and Cressida 

— Alexas, an attendant. 

Antony and Cleopatra 

— Alice, a lady attendant. 

Henry v. 

— Alonzo, King of Naples. 

Tempest 

— Amiens, a lord, As You Like It 

— Andromache, wife of Hector. 

Troilus and Cressida 

— Andronicus, Marcus, a tribune. 

Titus Andronicus 

— Andronicus, Titus, a noble Ro- 

man . Titus Andronicus. 

— Angelo, a deputy . M. for M. 

— Angelo, a goldsmith. 

Comedy of Errors 

— Angus, a nobleman, Macbeth 

— Anjou, Duke of (Reignier). 

Henry vi., pt. 1 



1011 
356 
556 
712 
229 
1 

1054 
741 
688 
622 
281 
21 

1000 
304 



67 

712 

622 

205 
1 






Characters: Anne, Lady, widow 

of Edward. Richard iii. 556 

— Antenor, a Trojan commander. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Antigonus, a lord of Sicilia. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Antiochus, Daughter of. 

Pericles 977 

— Antiochus, King of Antioch. 

Pericles 977 

— Antipholus, of Ephesus. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Antipholus, of Syracuse. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Antonio, the usurping duke. 

Tempest 1 

— Antonio, father of Proteus. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Antonio, brother of Leonato. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Antonio, a merchant. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Antonio, a sea-captain. 

Twelfth Night 281 

— Antony, Mark . Julius Caesar 764 

— Apemantus, a philosopher. 

Timon of Athens 741 

— Apothecary, An, Rom. and J. 712 

— Archibald, Earl of Douglas. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Archidamus, a lord of Bohe- 

mia . . Winter's Tale 304 

— Ariel, a spirit . . Tempest 1 

— Aragon, prince of Aragon. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Artemidorus, of Cnidus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Arthur, Duke of Bretagne. 

King John 332 

— Arviragus, son of Cymbeline. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Audrey, a country wench. 

As You Like It 205 

— Aumerle, Duke of, Richard ii. 356 

— Autolycus, a rogue. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Auvergne, Countess of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Bagot, servant of king. 

Richard ii. 356 

— Balthasar, attendant of Don 

Pedro, Much Ado about N. Ill 

— Balthasar, servant of Portia. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Balthasar, servant of Romeo. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Balthazar, a merchant. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Banquo, a general . Macbeth 788 

— Baptista, a rich gentleman. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Bardolph, Lord. Hemy iv. ,pt. 2 409 

— Bardolph, a sharper. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Bardolph . Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Bardolph . Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Bardolph . . . Henry v. 439 

— Barnardine, a prisoner. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Bassanio, suitor of Portia. 

Merchant of Venice 181 



Shakespeare 



444 



Characters: Basset, of Lancaster 

faction . Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Bassianus, brother of Saturni- 

nus . . Titus Andronicus 688 

— Bastard of Orleans. 

Henry vi.. pt. 1 409 

— Bates, a soldier . Henry v. 43J 

— Beatrice, niece of Leonato. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Beaufort, Henrv. 

Henry vi.. pt, 1 469 

— Beaufort, Cardinal (Henrv). 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Beaufort, John. Duke of Som- 

erset . Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Beaufort, Thomas. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Bedford, Duke of . Henry v. 439 

— Bedford, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Belarius, a banished lord. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Belch, Sir Toby, uncle of Oli- 

via . . Twelfth Night 281 

— Benedick, a lord of Padua. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Benvolio, nephew of Monta- 

gue . . Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Berkeley, Lord . Richard ii. 356 

— Berkeley, a gentleman. 

Richard hi. 556 

— Bernardo, an officer . Hamlet 811 

— Bertram. Count of Rousillon. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— Bevis, George, Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Bianca. daughter of Baptista. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Bianca. mistress of Cassio. 

Othello 879 

— Bigot. Lord . . King John 332 

— Biondello. servant of Lucentio. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Biron. a lord . Love*s L. Lost 135 

— Blanch, of Spain . King John 332 

— Blount. Sir James, Richard hi. 556 

— Blunt, Sir Walter. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Blunt . . Henry iv.. pt. 2 409 

— Boleyn, Anne, maid of honor. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Bolingbroke,Henry,Richard ii. 330 

— Bohngbroke, a conjuror. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Bona, sister of the French 

queen . . Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Borachio, a follower of Don 

John, Much Ado about N. Ill 

— Bottom, a weaver. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Boult, a servant . . Pericles 977 

— Bourbon. Duke of . Henry v. 439 

— Bourchier, Cardinal. 

Richard hi. 556 

— Boyet. a lord, Love's L. Lost 135 

— Brabantio, a senator . Othello 879 

— Brakenbury, Sir Robert. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Brandon, a sergeant-at-arms. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Brutus, Junius, a tribute. 

Coriolanus 654 



Characters: Brutus, Marcus, a 

conspirator . Julius Caesar 764 

— Buckingham, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Buckingham, Duke of. 

Richard hi. 556 

— Buckingham, Duke of. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Bull-calf , a recruit. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Bullen, Anne. See Boleyn. 

— Burgundy, Duke of, Henry v. 439 

— Burgundy, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Burgundy, Duke of, King Lear 847 

— Bushy, servant to king. 

Richard ii. 356 

— Butts, Dr., physician to king. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Cade, Jack, a rebel. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Cadwal (Arviragus) . Cymb. 944 

— Caithness, a nobleman. 

Macbeth 788 

— Caius. Doctor, a physician 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Caius, kinsman of Titus. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Caius, Lucius, a general. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Caius Marcius (Coriolanus). 

Coriolanus 654 

— Calchas, a Trojan priest. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Cahban, a savage slave. 

Tempest 1 

— Calpurriia, wife of Caesar. 

Julius Cassar 764 

— Cambridge. Earl of, Henry v. 439 

— Camiilo, a lord of Sicilia. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Campeius, Cardinal. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Canidius, a lieutenant-general. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Canterbury, Archbishop of. 

Henry v. 439 

— Canterbury,* Archbishop of 

(Bourchier) . Richard iii. 556 

— Canterbury, Archbishop of 

(Cranmer) . Henry viii. 592 

— Caphis. a servant . T. of A. 741 

— Capucius, an embassador. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Capulet . Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Capulet, Lady, " 712 

— Carlisle, Bishbp of. Richard ii. 356 

— Casca, a conspirator. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Cassandra, daughter of Priam. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Cassio, lieutenant of Othello. 

OtheUo 879 

— Cassius, a conspirator. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Catesby, Sir William. 

Richard hi. 556 

— Cato, Young, friend of Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Celia, daughter of Frederick. 

As You Like It 205 



445 



Shakespeare 



Characters: Ceres, a spirit. 

Tempest 1 

— Cerimon, a lord . Pericles 977 

— Charles VI., of France. 

Henry v. 439 

— Charles the Dauphin. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Charles, -wrestler of Frederick. 

As You Like It 205 

— Charmian, attendant. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Chatham, Clerk of. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Chatillon, an embassador. 

King John 332 

— Chiron, son of Tamora. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Christopher Sly. a tinker. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Cicero, a senator, Julius Caesar 764 

— Cinna, a conspirator, " 764 

— Cinna, a poet, " 764 

— Clarence, Duke of (Thomas). 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Clarence, Duke of (George). 

Richard iii. 556 

— Claudio, a young gentleman. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Claudio, a lord of Florence. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Claudius, servant of Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Claudius, king of Denmark. 

Hamlet 811 

— Cleomenes, a lord of Sicilia. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Cleon, governor of Tarsus. 

Pericles 977 

— Cleopatra, queen of Egypt. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Clifford, Lord, Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Clifford. Lord. Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Clifford, son of Lord Clifford. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Clitus, servant of Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Cloten, son of the queen. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Clown, son of Shepherd. 

Winter's Tale 304 
(— Clown, servant of Othello. 

Othello 879 

— Cobweb, a fairy. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Colevile, Sir John. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Cominius, a general. 

Coriolanus 654 

— Conrade, a follower of Don 

John, Much Ado about N. Ill 

— Constable of France, Henry v. 439 

— Constance, mother of Arthur. 

King John 332 

— Cordelia, daughter of Lear. 

King Lear 847 

— Corin, a shepherd. 

As You Like It 205 

— Coriolanus (Caius Marcius). 

Coriolanus 654 

— Cornelius, a courtier, Hamlet 811 

— Cornelius, a physician, Cymb. 944 



Characters: Cornwall, Duke of. 

King Lear 847 

— Costard, a clown. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Court, a soldier . Henry v. 439 

— Cranmer, Archbishop of Can- 

terbury . . Henry viii. 592 

— Cressida, daughter of Calchas. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Cromwell, servant of Wolsey. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Curan, a courtier, King Lear 847 

— Curio, a gentleman. 

Twelfth Night 281 

— Curtis, servant of Petruchio. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Cymbeline. king of Britain. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Dardanius, servant of Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Daw, servant of Shallow. 

Henry iv.. pt. 2 409 

— Decius Brutus, a conspirator. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Deiphobus. son of Priam. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Demetrius, in love with Hermia. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Demetrius, son of Tamora. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Demetrius, friend of Antony. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Dennis, servant of Oliver. - 

As You Like It 205 

— Denny, Sir Anthony. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Derby, Earl of (Stanley). 

Richard iii. 556 

— Dercetas, friend of Antony. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Desdemona, daughter of Bra- 

bantio . . . Othello 879 

— Diana, daughter of widow. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— Diana, the goddess . Pericles 977 

— Dick, the butcher. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Diomedes, a Greek prince. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Diomedes, attendant on Cleo- 

patra. 

Antony and Cleopatra 91 1 

— Dion, a lord . Winter's Tale 304 

— Dionyza, wife of Cleon. 

Pericles 977 

— Dogberry, a constable. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Dolabella, friend of Caesar. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Doll Tearsheet, a courtesan. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Domitius Enobarbus. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Don Adriano de Armado. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Don John, a bastard. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Don Pedro, Prince of Aragon. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Donalbain, son of Duncan. 

Macbeth 788 



446 



Characters : Dorcas, a shepherd- 
ess .... Winter's Tale 

— Dorset, Marquis of, son of 

Elizabeth . . Eichard hi. 

— Douglas, Earl of (Archibald). 

Henry iv., pt. 1 

— Dromio, of Ephesus. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Dromio, of Syracuse. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Duke, living in exile. 

As You Like It 205 

— Dukes. See Surnames. 

— Dull, a constable. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Dumain, a lord. " 135 

— Duncan, king of Scotland. 

Macbeth 788 

— Earls. See Surnames. 

— Edgar, son of Gloucester. 

King Lear 847 

— Edmund, of Langley. 

Richard ii. 356 

— Edmund, Earl of Rutland. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Edmund, bastard of Gloucester. 

King Lear 847 

— Edward, Prince of Wales. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Edward, Earl of March (Ed- 

ward IV.), Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Edward IV. . . Richard hi. 

— Edward, Prince of Wales (Ed- 

ward V.) . . Richard hi. 

— Egeus, father of Hermia. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 

— Eglamour, agent for Sylvia. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Elbows, a simple constable. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Eleanor, Duchess of Glouces- 

ter . . Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Elinor, mother of King John. 

King John 

— Elizabeth, queen of Edward 

IV. . . Richard hi. 

— Ely, Bishop of . Henry v. 

— Ely, Bishop of (Morton). 

Richard hi. 

— Emilia, a lady attendant. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Emilia, wife of Iago, Othello 879 

— Eros, friend of Antony. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Erpingham, Sir Thomas. 

Henry v. 439 

— Escalus, an ancient lord. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Escalus, Prince of Verona. 

Romeo and Juhet 712 

— Escanes, a lord . . Pericles 977 

— Essex, Earl of . King John 332 

— Euphronius, an embassador. 

Antony and Cleopatra 

— Evans, Sir Hugh, a Welsh par- 

son . Merry Wives of W. 

— Exeter, Duke of . Henry v. 

— Exeter, Duke of (Thos. Beau- 

fort) . Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Exeter, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 



304 

556 






556 



556 
161 



a32 



556 



556 



911 

42 



Characters: Fabian, servant of 

Olivia . . Twelfth Night 281 

— Falstaff , Sir John. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Falstaff, Sir John. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Falstaff, Sir John. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Fang, a sheriff's officer. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Fastolfe, Sir John. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Faulconbridge, Robert. 

King John 332 

— Faulconbridge, Lady. " 332 

— Feeble, a recruit. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Fenton, a gentleman. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Ferdinand, son of king of Na- 

ples . . Tempest 1 

— Ferdinand, king of Navarre. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Feste, a clown, Twelfth Night 281 

— Fitzwater. Lord . Richard ii. 356 

— Flaminius, servant of Timon. 

Timon of Athens 741 

— Flavius, a steward. " 741 

— Flavius, a tribune. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Fleance, son of Banquo. 

Macbeth 788 

— Florence, Duke of. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— Florizel, Prince of Bohemia. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Fluellen, an officer, Henry v. 439 

— Flute, a bellows-mender. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Ford, a gentleman of Wind- 

sor . Merry Wives of W. 42 

— Ford, Mistress. " 42 

— Fortinbras, Prince of Norway. 

Hamlet 811 

— France, King of. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— France, King of . King Lear 847 

— Francis, a friar. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Francisca, a nun. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Francisco, a lord . Tempest 1 

— Francisco, a soldier . Hamlet 811 

— Frederick, brother of duke. 

As You Like It 205 

— French sergeant. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Froth, a foolish gentleman. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Gadshffl . . Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Gahus, friend of Caesar. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Gardiner, Bishop of Winches- 

ter . . Henry viii. 592 

— Gargrave, Sir Thomas. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Gaunt, John of . Richard ii. 356 

— General of French forces in 

Bordeaux, Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— George, afterward Duke of 

Clarence . Henry vi., pt. 3 526 



447 



Shakespeare 



Characters: George, Duke of 
Clarence . . Richard iii. 

— Gertrude, queen of Denmark. 

Hamlet 

— Ghost of Banquo . Macbeth 

— Ghost of Hamlet's father. 

Hamlet 

— Glansdale, Sir William. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 

— Glendower, Owen. " 

— Gloucester, Duchess of. 

Richard ii. 

— Gloucester, Duchess of (El- 

eanor) . Henry vi., pt. 2 

— Gloucester, Duke of, Henry v. 

— Gloucester, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Gloucester, Duke of (Humph- 

rey) . . Henry vi., part 2 

— Gloucester, Duke of (Richard 

III.) . . Richard iii. 

— Gloucester, Earl of, King Lear 

— Gloucester, Humphrey, son of 

Henry IV., Henry 'iv., pt. 2 

— Gobbo, Old, father of Launce- 

lot . Merchant of Venice 

— Goffe, Matthew. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 

— Goneril, daughter of Lear. 

King Lear 

— Gonzalo, a counselor, Tempest 

— Governor of Paris. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Gower . . Henry iv., pt. 2 

— Gower, an officer . Henry v. 

— Gower, as chorus . Pericles 

— Grandpre, a French lord. 

Henry v. 

— Gratiano, friend of Bassanio. 

Merchant of Venice 

— Gratiano, brother of Braban- 

tio Othello 

— Grave-diggers . . Hamlet 

— Green, servant of king. 

Richard ii. 

— Gregory, servant of Capulet. 

Romeo and Juliet 

— Gremio, suitor of Bianca. 

Taming of the Shrew 

— Grey, Lady, afterward queen 

of Edward IV. 

Henry iv., pt. 3 

— Grey, Lord, son of Elizabeth. 

Richard iii. 

— Grey, Sir Thomas . Henry v. 

— Griffith, gentleman-usher. 

Henry vii. 

— Grumio, servant of Petruchio. 

Taming of the Shrew 

— Guiderius, son of Cymbeline. 

Cymbeline 

— Guildenstern, a courtier. 

Hamlet 

— Guildford, Sir Henry. 

Henry viii. 

— Gurney, James, a servant. 

King John 

— Hamlet, prince of Denmark. 

Hamlet 

— Harcourt . Henry iv.. pt. 2 

— Harfleur, Gov. of . Henry v. 



409 
181 



Characters: Hastings, Lord. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Hastings, Lord, Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Hastings, Lord . Richard iii. 556 

— Hecate, a witch . Macbeth 788 

— Hector, son of Priam. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Helen, wife of Menalaus. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Helen, attendant of Imogen. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Helena, in love with Deme- 

trius, Mids. -night's Dream 161 

— Helena, a gentlewoman. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— Helen us, son of Priam. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Helicanus, a lord . Pericles 977 

— Henry the Fourth. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Henry the Fourth. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Henry the Fifth . Henry v. 439 

— Henry the Sixth. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Henry the Sixth. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Henry the Sixth. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Henry the Eighth, Henry viii. 592 

— Henry, son of John, King John 332 

— Henry Bolingbroke, Richard ii. 356 

— Henry, Prince of VVales. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Henry, Prince of Wales. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Henry, earl of Richmond. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Henry, earl of Richmond (Hen- 

ry VII.) . . Richard iii. 556 

— Herbert, Sir Walter. " 556 

— Hereford, Duke of (Boling- 

broke) . . Richard ii. 356 

— Hermia, daughter of Egeus. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Hermione, Queen of Leontes. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Hero, daughter of Leonato. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Hippolyta, Queen of the Ama- 

zons, Mids. -night's Dream 161 

— Holland, John, Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Holofernes, a schoolmaster. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Horatio, friend of Hamlet. 

Hamlet 811 

— Horner, Thomas, an armorer. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Hortensio, suitor of Bianca. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Hortensius, servant of Timon's 

creditors, Timon of Athens 741 

— Host, where Julia lodges. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Hostess of Eastcheap Tavern. 

Henry v. 439 

— Hotspur (Henry Percy). 

Richard ii. 356 

— Hotspur (Henry Percy). 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Hubert de Burgh, King John 332 



Shakespeare 



US 



Characters: Hume, John, a 

priest . . Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Humphrey, of Gloucester. 

Henry iv.. pt. 2 409 

— Humphrey, Duke of Glouces- 

ter . . Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Humphrey, Duke of Glouces- 

ter . . Henry vi.. pt. 2 496 

— Hymen . . As You Like It 203 

— Iachimo, friend of Philario. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Iago, ancient of Othello, Oth. 879 

— Iden, Alexander, a Kentish 

gentleman, Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Imogen, daughter of Cymbe- 

line . . Cynibeline 944 

— Iras, attendant on Cleopatra. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Iris, a spirit . . Tempest 1 

— Isabel, Queen of France. 

Henry v. 439 

— Isabella, sister of Claudio. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Jack Cade, a rebel. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Jaquenetta, a country wench. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Jaques, a lord, As You Like it 205 

— Jaques, son of Sir Rowland. 

As You Like It 205 

— Jamy, an officer . Henry v. 439 

— Jessica, daughter of Shylock. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Joan La Pucelle (Joan of Arc). 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— John, King of England. 

King John 332 

— John of Gaunt . Richard ii. 356 

— John of Lancaster. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— John of Lancaster. 

Henry iv.,pt. 2 409 

— John, a Franciscan friar. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Jourdain, Margaret, a witch. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Julia, beloved of Proteus. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Juliet, beloved of Claudio. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Juliet, daughter of Capulet. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Julius Cassar . Julius Caesar 764 

— Junius Brutus— a tribune. 

Coriolanus 654 

— Juno, a spirit . . Tempest 1 

— Katharina, daughter of Bap- 

tista. Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Katharine, a lady attendant. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Katharine, dtr. of Charles VI. 

Henry v. 439 

— Katharine, queen of Henry 

VIII. . . Henry viii. 592 

— Kent, Earl of . King Lear 847 

— Kings. See Patronymics. 

— La Pucelle (Joan of Arci. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Lady. See Surnames. 

— Laertes, son of Polonius. 

Hamlet 811 



Characters: Lafeu, an old lord. 

AlTs Well that Ends Well 254 

— Lancaster, Duke of, Richard ii. 3 56 

— Lancaster, J ohn of. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Lancaster, John of. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Launce, a clown of Proteus. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Launcelot Gobbo, a clown. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Laurence, a Franciscan friar. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Lavinia, daughter of Titus An- 

dronicus, Tit. Andronicus 688 

— Le Beau, a courtier. 

As You Like It 205 

— Lear, King of Britain, King L. 847 

— Lennox, a nobleman, Macbeth 788 

— Leonardo, servant of Bassa- 

nio . Merchant of Venice 181 

— Leonato, Governor of Messi- 

na . Much Ado about N. Ill 

— Leonine, a servant, Pericles 977 

— Leontes, King of Sicilia. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Lepidus, M. iEmilius, a tri- 

umvir . . Julius Cassar 764 

— Lepidus, M. ./Emilius, a tri- 

umvir . Ant. and Cleop. 911 

— Lieutenant of Aufidius, Cor. 654 

— Ligarius, a conspirator. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Lincoln, Bishop of, Henry viii. 592 

— Lodovico, kinsman of Braban- 

tio . . . Othello 879 

— Longaville, a lord, L.'s L.'s L. 135 

— Lord Chamberlain, Henry viii. 592 

— Lord Chancellor, " 592 

— Lord Chief -Justice of King's 

Bench . Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Lord Marshal . Richard ii. 356 

— Lords. See Surnames. 

— Lorenzo, in love with Jessica 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Louis XL, of France. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Louis, the Dauphin, King John 332 

— Louis, the Dauphin, Henry v. 439 

— Lovel. Lord . . Richard hi. 556 

— Lovell, Sir Thomas, Henry viii. 592 

— Luce, servant of Adriana. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Lucentio, son of Vincentio. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Lucetta, attendant of Julia. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Luciana, sister of Adriana. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Lucilius, friend of Brutus: 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Lucilius, servant of Timon. 

Timon of Athens 741 

— Lucio, a fantastic, M. for M. 67 

— Lucius, son of Titus Androni- 

cus . Titus Andronicus 688 

— Lucius, Young, son of Lucius. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Lucius, a lord . Timon of A. 741 

— Lucius, servant of Timon's 

creditors, Timon of Athens 741 



449 



Shakespeare 



Characters: Lucius, servant of 

Brutus . . Julius Caesar 764 

— Lucullus, a lord, Timon of A. 741 

— Lucy, Sir William. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Lychorida, nurse of Marina. 

Pericles 977 

— Lymoges, Duke of Austria. 

King John 332 

— Lysander, in love with Her- 

mia Mids. -night's Dream 161 

— Lysimachus, governor of Mity- 

Ipup Pericles QT7 

— Macbeth, a general. Macbeth 788 

— Macbeth, Lady, " 788 

— Macduff, a nobleman, " 788 
~ Macduff, Lady, " 788 

— Macmorris, an officer, Henry v. 439 

— Malcolm, son of Duncan. 

Macbeth 788 
~ Malvolio, steward of Olivia. 

Twelfth Night 281 

— Mamillius, prince of Sicilia. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Marcellus, an officer, Hamlet 8il 

— March, Earl of (Edmund Mor- 

timer) . Henry iv., pt. 1 382 
-- March, Earl of (Edmund Mor- 
timer . Henry vi. , pt. 1 469 

— March, Earl of (Edward). 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Marcius, son of Coriolanus. 

Coriolanus 654 

— Marcus Antonius, a triumvir. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Mardian, a eunuch. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Margarelon, a bastard, son of 

Priam . Troll, and Cress. 622 

— Margaret, a gentlewoman. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Margaret, daughter of Reig- 

nier . . Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Margaret, queen of Henry VI. 

Henry vi.,pt. 2 496 

— Margaret, queen of Henry VI. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Margaret, widow of Henry VI. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Maria, a lady attendant. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Maria, Olivia's woman. 

Twelfth Night 281 

— Mariana, betrothed to Angelo. 

Measure for Measure 67 

— Mariana, friend of widow. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— Marina, daughter of Pericles. 

Pericles 977 
-- Mark Antony, a triumvir. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Martext, Sir Oliver, a vicar. 

As You Like It 205 

— Martius, son of Titus, Tit. An 688 

— Marullus, a tribune, J. Caesar 764 

— Mayor of London. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Mayor of London, Richard iii. 556 

— Mayor of St. Albans. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Mayor of York, Henry vi . , pt. 3 526 

29 



Characters: Mecsenas, friend of 

Caesar, Ant. and Cleopatra 911 

— Melun, a French lord, King J. 332 

— Menalaus, brother of Aga- 

memnon, Troil. and Cress. 622 

— Menas, friend of Pompey. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Menecrates, friend of Pompey. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Menenius Agrippa, friend of 

Coriolanus . Coriolanus 654 

— Menteith, a nobleman, Macb. 788 

— Mercade, a lord. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Mercutio, friend of Romeo. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Messala, friend to Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Metellus Cimber, a conspira- 

tor . . Julius Caesar 764 

— Michael. Sir, Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Michael . . Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Milan, Duke of, father to Syl- 

via, Two Gent, of Verona 21 

— Miranda, daughter of Pros- 

pero . . Tempest 1 

— Mitylene, Governor of (Lysim- 

achus) . . Pericles 977 

— Montague, Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Montague, Lady " 712 

— Montague, Mai'quess of. 

Hemy vi., pt. 3 526 

— Montano, of Cyprus, Othello 879 

— Montgomery, Sir John. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Montjoy, a French herald. 

Henry v. 439 

— Mopsa, a shepherdess. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Morocco, Prince of, suitor of 

Portia, Merchant of Venice 181 

— Mortimer, Edmund, Earl of 

March . Henry iv., pt. 1 3S2 

— Mortimer, Edmund, Earl of 

March . Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Mortimer, Lady, daughter of 

Glendower, Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Mortimer, Sir Hugh. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Mortimer, Sir John. " 526 

— Morton, a retainer. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Morton, John, Bishop of Ely. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Moth, page of Armado. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Moth, a fairy, Mids. -night's D. 161 

— Mouldy, a recruit. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Mowbray, Lord. ' ; " 409 

— Mowbray, Thomas, Duke of 

Norfolk . . Richard ii. 356 

— Mrs. See Surnames. 

— Mustardseed, a fairy. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Mutius, son of Titus Androni- 

cus . Titus Andronicus 688 

— Nathaniel, Sir, a curate. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Nerissa, maid of Portia. 

Merchant of Venice 181 



Shakespeare 



450 



Characters: Nestor, a Greek 

prince . Troil. and Cress. 622 

— Norfolk, Duke of (Mowbray). 

Richard ii. 356 

— Norfolk, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Norfolk, Duke of, Richard iii. 556 

— Norfolk, Duke of, Henry viii. 592 

— Northumberland, Earl of. 

Richard ii. 356 

— Northumberland, Earl of (Hen- 

ry Percy), Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Northumberland, Earl of. 

Henry iv., pt, 2 409 

— Northumberland, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Northumberland, Earl of (Si- 

ward) . . Macbeth 788 

— Northumberland, Lady. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Nurse of Juliet, Roth, and Jul. 712 

— Nym, a sharper, Merry Wives 42 

— Nym . . . Henry v. 439 

— Ooeron, king of fairies. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Octavia, sister of Caesar. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Octavius, Caesar, a triumvir. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Octavius, Caesar, a triumvir. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Old Shepherd', reputed father 

ofPerdita, Winter's Tale 304 

— Oliver, son of Sir Rowland. 

As You Like It 205 

— Olivia . . Twelfth Night 281 

— Ophelia, daughter of Polonius. 

Hamlet 811 

— Orlando, son of Sir Rowland. 

As You Like It 205 

— Orleans, Duke of . Henry v. 439 

— Orleans, Bastard of. 

Henry vi.,pt, 1 469 

— Orleans, Master-gunner of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Orsino, Duke of Illyria. 

Twelfth Night 231 

— Osric, a courtier . Hamlet 811 

— Oswald, steward of Goneril. 

King Lear 847 

— Othello, a noble Moor, Othello 879 

— Overdone, Mistress, a courte- 

san, Measure for Measure 67 

— Oxford, Earl of, Henry vi. , pt, 3 526 

— Oxford, Earl of, Richard iii. 556 

— Page, a gentleman of Windsor. 

Merry Wives of W. 42 

— Page, Mistress, " " 42 

— Page, Anne, " " 42 

— Page, William, son of Page. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Pandoras, uncle of Cressida. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Pandulph, Cardinal, the Pope's 

legate . . King John 332 

— Panthino, a servant of Anto- 

nio, Two Gent, of Verona 21 

— Paris, Governor of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 4G9 

— Paris, son of Priam. 

Trcilus and Cressida 623 



Characters: Paris, a nobleman. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Parolles, a follower of Ber- 

tram . . All's Well 254 

— Patience, woman to Katha- 

rine . . Henry viii. 592 

— Patroelus, a Greek prince. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Paulina, wife of Antigonus. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Peaseblossom, a f any. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Pedant, A . Taming of the S. 229 

— Pembroke, Earl of, King John 332 

— Pembroke, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Percy, Henry (Hotspur). 

Richard ii. 356 

— Percy, Henry (Hotspur). 

Henry iv., pt. 1 332 

— Percy, Henry, Earl of North- 

umberland, Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Percy, Lady, wife of Hotspur. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 332 

— Percy, Thomas, Earl of Worces- 

ter . . Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Percy, Lady, Henry iv.. pt. 2 409 

— Perdita, daughter of Leontes. 

Winter's Tale 304 

— Pericles, prince of Tyre, Per. 977 

— Peter, a friar . M. for M. 67 

— Peter, of Pomf ret, a prophet. 

King John 332 

— Peter, servant of Horner. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Peter, servant of Juliet's 

nurse . Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Peto . . . Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Peto . . Heniy iv., pt. 2 409 

— Petruchio, a gentleman of Ve- 

rona, Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Phebe, a shepherdess. 

As You Like It 205 

— Philario, friend of Posthumus. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Philemon, servant of Cerimon. 

Pericles 977 

— Philip. King of France, King J . 332 

— Philip, the Bastard, " 332 

— Philo, friend of Antony. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Philostrate, master of revels. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Philotus, servant of Timon's 

creditors, Timon of Athens 741 

— Phrynia, mistress of Alcibia- 

des . Timon of Athens 741 

— Pierce, of Exton, Sir. 

Richard ii. 356 

— Pinch, a schoolmaster. 

Comedy of Errors 93 

— Pindarus, servant of Cassius. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Pisanio, servant of Posthu- 

mus . . Cymbeline 944 

— Pistol, a sharper. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Pistol . . Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Pistol . . . Henry v. 439 

— Plantagenet, Edward. 

Henry vi..pt. 2 498 



451 



Shakespeare 



Characters: Platitagenet. Marga- 
ret . . Richard iii. 556 

— Plantagenet, Richard. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Plantagenet, Richard. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Plantagenet, Richard, Duke of 

York . Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Poins . Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Poins . . Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Polixenes, King of Bohemia. 

Winters Tale 304 

— Polonius, lord chamberlain. 

Hamlet 811 

— Polydore (Guiderus) . Cymb. 944 

— Pompeius, Sextus. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Pompey, a servant, M. for M. 67 

— Popilius, Lena, Julius Caesar 764 

— Portia, a rich heiress. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Portia, wife of Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Posthumus, Leonatus, a gen- 

tleman . . Cymbeline 944 

— Priam, King of Troy. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Princess of France. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Proculeius, friend of Caesar. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Prospero, the right Duke of 

Milan . . Tempest 1 

— Proteus, a gentleman. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Provost, a friar . M. for M. 67 

— Publius, son of Marcus. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Publius, a senator . J. Caesar 764 

— Puck, or Robin Goodfellow. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Queen of Richard II. 

Richard ii. 336 

— Queen, wife of Cymbeline. 

Cymbeline 944 

— Queens. See Patronymics. 

— Quickly, Mistress. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Quickly, Mistress, a hostess. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 332 

— Quickly, Mistress, a hostess. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Quince, a carpenter. 

Midsummei'-night's Dream 161 

— Quintus, son of Titus. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Rambures, a French lord. 

Henry v. 439 

— Ratcliff, Sir Richard. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Regan, daughter of Lear. 

King Lear 847 

— Reignier, Duke of Anjou. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Reynaldo, servant of Polonius. 

Hamlet 811 

— Richard the Second, Richard ii. 356 

— Richard, afterward Duke of 

Gloucester, Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Richard, Duke of Gloucester. 

Richard iii. 556 



Characters: Richard, Duke of 
York, son of Edward IV. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Richmond, Earl of (Henry 

VII.) . Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Richmond, Earl of (Henry 

VII.) . . Richard iii. 556 

— Rivers, Earl, brother of Eliza- 

beth . , Richard iii. 556 
-- - Rivers, Lord, brother of Lady 

Grey . Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Robin, a page of Falstaff . 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Roderigo, a Venetian gentle- 

man . . . Othello 879 

— Romeo, son of Montague. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Rosalind, daughter of ban- 

ished duke, As You Like It 205 

— Rosaline, a lady attendant. 

Love's Labor's Lost 135 

— Rosencrantz . . Hamlet 811 

— Ross, Lord . . Richard ii. 356 

— Ross, a nobleman . Macbeth 788 

— Rotherham, Thomas, Arch- 

bishop of York. Richard iii. 550 

— Rousillon, Countess of. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— Rugby, a servant of Dr. Caius. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 42 

— Rumor, the Presenter. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Rutland, Earl of (Edmund). 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Salanio, friend of Bassanio. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Salarino, friend of Bassanio. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Salerio, friend of Bassanio. 

Merchant of Venice 181 

— Salisbury, Earl of, King John &32 

— Salisbury, Earl of, Richard ii. 356 

— Salisbury, Earl of . Henry v. 439 

— Salisbury, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Salisbury, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Sampson, servant of Capulet. 

Romeo and Juliet 712 

— Sands, Lord . Henry viii. 592 

— Saturninus, Titus Andronicus 688 

— Sav, Lord . Hemy vi., pt. 2 496 

— Scales, Lord, " 496 

— Scarus, Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Scroop, Lord . Henry v. 439 

— Scroop, Richard, Archbishop 

of York . Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Scroop, Richard, Archbishop 

of York . Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Scroop, Sir Stephen. 

Richard ii. 356 

— Sea Captain, friend of Viola. 

Twelfth Night 281 

— Sebastian, brother to King of 

Naples . . Tempest 1 

— Sebastian, brother of Viola. 

.Twelfth Night 281 
"— Seleucus, attendant on Cleo- 
patra . Ant. and Cleop. 911 

— Sempronius, kinsman of Titus. 

Titus Andronicus 688 



Shakespeare 



452 



Characters: Sempronius, a lord 
Timon of Athens 

— Servilius, servant of Timon. 

Timon of Athens 

— Sextus Pompeius. 

Antony and Cleopatra 

— Seyton, an officer . Macbeth 

— Shadow, a recruit. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 

— Shallow, a country justice. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 

— Shallow, a country justice. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 

— Shepherd, Old, Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Shyloek, Merchant of Venice 

— Sicinius, Velutus, a tribune. 

Coriolanus 

— Silence, a country justice. 

Henry iv. . pt. 2 

— Silius, an army officer. 

Antony and Cleopatra 

— Silvia, beloved of Valentine. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 

— Silvius, a shepherd. 

As You Like It 

— Simonides, King of Pentapo- 

lis Pericles 

— Simpcox, an impostor. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 

— Simple, servant of Slender. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 

— Sir. See Surnames. 

— Siward, Earl of Northumber- 

land . . Macbeth 

— Siward, Young, . " 

— Slender, cousin of Shallow. 

Merry Wives of Windsor 

— Smith, the weaver. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 

— Snare, a sheriff's officer. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 

— Snout, a tinker. 

Midsummer-night's D. 

— Snug, a joiner, " 

— Solinus, Duke of Ephesus, 

Comedy of Errors 

— Somerset, Duke of (John Beau- 

fort) . Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Somerset, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 

— Somerset, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 

— Somerville, Sir John, " 

— Southwell, John, a priest. 

Henry vii., pt. 2 

— Speed, a clown of Valenlrine. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 

— Stafford, Sir Humphrey. 

Henry vi. 

— Stafford, William. 

Henry vi. 

— Stafford, Lord, Henry vi. 

— Stanley, Sir John. 

Henry vi. 

— Stanley, Sir William 

Henry vi. 

— Stanley, Lord, Earl of Derby 

Richard iii. 

— Starveling, a tailor. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 

— Stephano, a butler, Tempest 



741 
741 

911 

78P 

409 

42 

400 
409 
181 

654 

409 

911 

21 
205 
977 
496 

42 

788 
788 

42 

496 

409 

161 
161 



496 

526 
526 

496 

21 

496 



pt. 2 

pt. 2 496 

pt. 3 526 

pt. 2 496 

pt. 3 526 



Characters: Stephano, servant of 

Portia, Merchant of Venice 181 

— Strato, servant of Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Suffolk, Duke of. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Suffolk, Duke of, Henry viii. 592 

— Suffolk, Earl of, Henry vi. , pt . 1 469 

— Surrey, Duke of . Richard ii. 356 

— Surrey, Earl of. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Surrey, Earl of . Richard iii. 556 

— Surrey, Earl of . Henry viii. 592 

— Surveyor to Buckingham. 

Henry viii. 592 

— Talbot, Lord, Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Talbot, John, " 469 

— Tamora, Queen of the Goths. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Tarsus, Governor of (Cleon). 

Pericles 977 

— Taurus, lieutenant-general to 

Caesar, Ant. and Cleopatra 911 

— Thaisa, daughter of Simonides. 

Pericles 977 

— Thaliard, a lord of Antioch. 

Pericles 977 

— Thersites, a deformed Greek. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Theseus, duke of Athens. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Thomas, a friar . . M. for M. 67 

— Thomas, duke of Clarence. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Thurio, a rival of Valentine. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Thy reus, friend of Caesar. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Timandra, mistress of Alcibi- 

ades . Timon of Athens 741 

— Timon of Athens " 741 

— Titania, queen of fairies. 

Midsummer-night's Dream 161 

— Titinius, friend to Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Titus Andronicus, a noble Ro- 

man . Titus Andronicus 688 

— Titus Lartius, a general. 

Coriolanus 654 

— Titus, servant of Timon's cred- 

itors . Timon of Athens 741 

— Touchstone, a clown. 

As You Like It 205 

— Tranio, servant of Lucentio. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Travers, a retainer. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Trebonius, a conspirator. 

Julius Caesar 761 

— Tressel, a gentleman. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Trinculo, a jester . Tempest 1 

— Troilus, son of Priam. 

Troilus and Cressida 62S 

— Tubal, a Jew . Mer. of Venice 181 

— Tullus Aufidius, a general. 

Coriolanus 654 

— Tutor of Rutland. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Tybalt, nephew of Lady Cap- 

ulet . Romeo and Juliet 712 



453 



Shakespeare 



Characters: Tyrrel, Sir James. 

Richard iii. 556 
- Ulysses, a Greek prince. 

Troilus and Cressida 622 

— Ursula, a gentlewoman. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Urswick, Christopher, a priest. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Valentine, a gentleman. 

Two Gentlemen of Verona 21 

— Valentine, a gentleman. 

Twelfth Night 281 

— Valentine, kinsman of Titus. 

Titus Andronicus 688 

— Valeria, friend of Virgilia. 

Coriolanus 654 

— Varrius . Meas. for Meas. 67 

— Varrius, friend of Pompey. 

Antony and Cleopatra 911 

— Varro, a servant, Julius Caesar 764 

— Vaughan, Sir Thomas. 

Richard iii. 556 

— Vaux. . Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Vaux, Sir Nicholas, Henry viii. 592 

— Venice, Duke of . Mer.'of V. 181 

— Venice, Duke of . . Othello 879 

— Ventidius . Timon of Athens 741 

— Ventidius . Ant. and Cleop. 911 

— Verges, a head borough. 

Much Ado about Nothing 111 

— Vernon, Sir Richard . 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Vernon, of York faction. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 

— Vincentio, the duke, M. for M. 67 

— Vincentio, an old gentleman. 

Taming of the Shrew 229 

— Viola . . . Twelfth Night 281 

— Violenta, friend of widow. 

All's Well that Ends Well 254 

— Virgilia, wife of Coriolanus. 

Coriolanus 654 

— Voltimand, a courtier, Hamlet 811 

— Volumnia. a mother of Corio- 

lanus . . . Coriolanus 654 

— Volumnius, friend of Brutus. 

Julius Caesar 764 

— Wart, a recruit, Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Warwick, Earl of, " 409 

— Warwick, Earl of, Henry v. 439 

— Warwick, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 1 469 
■— Warwick, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 
— • Warwick, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Westminster, Abbot of. 

Richard ii. 356 

— Westmoreland, Earl of. 

Henry iv., pt. 1 382 

— Westmoreland, Earl of. 

Henry iv., pt. 2 409 

— Westmoreland, Earl of. 

Henry v. 439 

— Westmoreland, Earl of. 

Henry vi., pt. 3 526 

— Whitmore, Walter. 

Henry vi., pt. 2 496 

— Widow, of Florence, All's Well 254 

— - William, in love with Audrey. 

As You Like It. 205 



Characters: Williams, a soldier. 
Henry v. 

— Willoughby, Lord, Richard ii. 

— Wiltshire, Sheriff of. 

Richard iii. 

— Winchester, Bishop of (.Henry 

Beaufort) Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Winchester, Bishop of (Car- 

dinal Beaufort) Henry vi., 
pt. 2 

— Winchester, Bishop of (Gar- 

diner) . . Henry viii. 

— Wolsey, Cardinal, " 

— W'oodville, lieutenant of the 

Tower. Henry vi., pt. 1 

— Worcester, Earl of (Thomas 

Percy) . Henry iv., pt. 1 

— York, Archbishop of (Richard 

Scroop), Henry iv., pt. 1 

— York, Archbishop of (Scroop). 

Henry iv., pt. 2 

— York, Archbishop of (Rother- 

ham) . . Richard iii. 

— York, Duchess of, Richard ii. 

— York, Duchess of, mother of 

Edward IV . Richard iii. 

— York, Duke of, uncle to the 

king . . Richard ii. 

— York, Duke of, cousin of 

Henry V. . . Henry v. 

— York, Duke of (Richard Plan- 

tagenet) . Henry vi., pt. 2 

— York, Duke of (Richard Plan- 

tagenet) Henry vi., pt. 3 

— York, Duke of (Richard, son 

of Edward IV.) Richard hi. 
Sonnets: A woman's face with 
Nature's own 

— Accuse me thus, that I have 

scanted 

— Against my love shall be 

— Against that time, if ever that 

time come .... 

— Ah, wherefore with inflection 

should he . 

— Alack, what poverty my muse 

brings forth 

— Alas, 'tis true I have gone here 

and there .... 

— As a decrepit father takes de- 

light 

— As an imperfect actor on the 

stage 

— As fast as thou shalt wane 

— Be wise as thou art cruel . 

— Being your slave what should 

I do 

— Beshrew that heart that makes 



my 



Betwixt mine eye and heart a 
league 

But be contented, when that 
fell arrest . 

But do thy worst to steal thy- 
self away .... 

But wherefore do not you a 
mightier .... 

Canst thou, O cruel! say I love 
thee not .... 

Cupid laid by his brand and 
fell asleep .... 



439 
356 



556 



592 
592 



469 



556 
356 



556 
356 



526 

556 

1033 

1042 
1033 

1034 



1040 

1041 

1032 

1031 
1029 
1045 

1035 

1044 

1033 

1037 

1039 

1030 

1046 

104S 



Shakespeare 



454 



Sonnets: Devouring Time, blunt 

thou 1030 

— Farewell ! thou art too dear for 1033 

— For shame ! deny that thou 

bear'stlove .... 1029 

— From fairest creatures we de- 

sire increase . . . 1028 

— From you have I been absent 

in the Spring . . . 1040 

— Full many a glorious morning 1032 

— How can I then return . . 1031 

— How can my Muse want sub- 

ject . . . . . 1032 

— How careful was I, when I 

took my way . . . 1034 

— How heavy do I journey on 

the way . . . . 1034 

— How like a winter hath my 

absence been . . . 1039 
r— How oft, when thou, my music 1043 
r- How sweet and lovely dost 

thou make . . . 1039 

— I grant thou wert not married 

to my Muse . . . 1033 

— I never saw that you did paint- 

ing need .... 1038 

— If my dear love were but the 

child 1043 

— If the dull substance of my 

flesh were . . . . 1033 

— If there be nothing new . . 1035 

— If thou survive my well-con- 

tented day .... 1032 

— If thy soul check thee that I 

come so near . . . 1044 

— In faith. I do not love thee with 

mine eyes .... 1045 

— In loving thee thou know'st I 

am forsworn . . . 1046 

— In the old age black was not 

counted fair .... 1043 

— Is it for fear to wet a widow's 

eye ...... 1029 

— Is it thy will thy image should 

keep open .... 1035 

— Let me confess that we two 

must be twain . . . 1032 

— Let me not to the marriage of 

true minds .... 1042 

— Let not my love be called idol- 

atry ' 1040 

— Let those who are in favor 

with their stars . . . 1031 

— Like as the waves make 

toward 1035 

— Like as, to make our appetites 

more keen .... 1042 

— Lo : as a careful housewife 

runs to catch . . . 1045 

— Lo ! in the orient when the 

gracious light . . . 1029 

— Look in thy glass, and tell the 

face 1028 

— Lord of my love, to whom in 

vassalage .... 1031 

— Love is my sin and thy dear 

virtue hate .... 1045 

— Love is too young to know 

what conscience is . . 1040 
•— Mine eye and heart are at a 

mortal war .... 1033 



Sonnets: Mine eye hath played 

the painter .... 1031 

— Music to hear, why hear'st 

thou music sadly? . . 1029 

— My glass shall not persuade 1030 

— My love is as a fever, longing 1046 

— My love is ttrengiien'd tho' 

more weak . . . 1040 

— My mistress' eyes are nothing 

like the sun . . . 1044 
■— My tongue-tied Muse in man- 
ners . . . . . ; 1038 

— No longer mourn for me when 

I am dead . . . . 1036 

— No more be grieved at that 

which thou hast . . 1032 

— No, Time thou shalt not boast 

that I do . . . . 1043 

— Not from the stars do I my 

judgment pluck . . 1030 

— Not marble, nor the gilded 

monuments . . . 1034 

— Not mine own fears, nor the 

prophetic soul . . . 1041 

— O, call not me to justify the 

wrong .... 1044 

— O, for my sake do you with 

fortune . . . . 1041 

— O, from what power hast thou 

this powerful . . . 1046 

— O, how faint when I of you do 

write ... . . 1037 

— O, how much more doth beauty 1034 

— O, how thy wort.i with man- 

ners 10.33 

— O, lest the world should task 

you to re jit 3 . . . . 1036 

— O, me, what eyes hath love put 

in my head . . . .1046 

— O, never say that I was false 

of heart. . . . . 1041 

— O, that you were yourself! . 1029 

— O, thou my lovely boy . .1043 

— O, truant Muse, what shall be 

thy amends .... 1040 

— Or I shall live your epitaph to 

make ....'. 1033 

— Or whether doth my mind, be- 

ing crowned . . . .1042 

— Poor soul, the center of my 

sinful earth .... 1045 

— Say that thou didst forsake 

me for some .... 1C39 

— Shall I compare thee to a sum- 

mer's day? .... 1033 

— Sin of self -love possesseth all 

mine eye .... 1035 

— Since brass, nor stone, nor 

earth 1C3S 

— Since I left you, mine eye is in 

my mind .... 1041 

— So am I as the rich, whose 

blessed key .... 1034 

— So are you to my thoughts as 

food to life . . . . 1037 

— So is it not with me as with 

that Muse .... 1030 

— So, now I have conf ess'd that 

he is thine .... 1044 

— So oft have I invoked thee for 

my Muse . • . . 103i' 



455 



Shakespeare 



Sonnets: So shall I live, suppos- 
ing thou art true . . 1039 

— Some glory in their birth . 1039 

— Some say thy fault in youth . 1039 

— Sweet love, renew thy force 1035 

— Take all my loves, my love . 1033 

— That god forbid that made me 103j 

— That time of year thou mayst 

in me 1037 

— That thou art blamed shall not 1036 

— That thou hast her it is not all 1033 

— That you were once unkind 

beiriends .... 1042 

— The expense of spirit in a 

waste of shame . . 1043 

— The forward violet thus did I 

chide 1040 

— The -little love-god lying once 

asleep .... 1046 

— The other two, slight air and 

purging lire . . 1033 

— Then hate me when thou wilt 1039 

— Then let not winter's ragged 

hand deface .... 1029 

— They that have power to hurt 

and will .... 1039 

— Thine eyes I love, and they as 

pitying me .... 1044 

— Those hours, that with gentle 

work did . . • . . 1028 

— Those lines that I before have 

writ 1042 

— Those lips that Love's own 

hand did make . . . 1045 

— Those parts of thee that the 

world's eye .... 1036 

— Those pretty wrongs that lib- 

erty 1033 

— Thou art as tyrannous, so as 

thou art . . . 1044 

— Thou blind fool, Love, what 

dost thou .... 1044 

— Thus can my love excuse the 

slow offense .... 1034 

— Thus is his cheek the map of 

days outworn . . . 103G 

— Thy bosom is endeared with 

all hearts .... 1032 

— Thy gift, thy tables, are with- 

in my brain .... 1043 

— Thy glass will show thee how 

thy beauties .... 1037 



1036 
1042 



1040 
1045 



1028 
1038 



Sonnets: Tired with all these, for 
restful death I cry 

— 'Tis better to be vile than vile 

esteemed 

— To me, fair friend, you never 

can be old . 

— Two loves I have of comfort 

and despair . 

— Unthrifty loveliness, why dost 

thou spend . 

— Was it the proud full sail of 

his great 

— Weary with toil, I haste me to 

my bed 1031 

— Were't aught to me I bore 

the canopy .... 1043 

— What's in the brain that ink 

may 1041 

— What is your substance . 1C3 1 

— What potions have I drunk of 

Siren's .... 1042 

— When forty winters shall be- 

siege 1028 

— When I consider everything 

that grows . . . 1030 

— When I do count the clock . 1029 

— When I have seen by Time's 

fell hand .... 1036 

— When in disgrace with fortune 1031 

— When in the chronicle of 

wasted time 

— When most I wink, then do 

mine eyes . 

— When my love swears that she 

is made 
- When thou shalt be disposed 
to set me . 

— When to the sessions of sweet 

silent .... 

— Where art thou, Muse, that 

thou 

— Whilst I alone did call upon 

— Who is it that says most? . 

— Who will believe my verse? 

— Whoever hath her wish, thou 

hast thy 

— Why didst thou promise such 

a beauteous . 

— Why is my verse so barren of 

hew pnde 

— Your love and pity doth the 

impression . 



1041 
1C33 
1044 
1038 

1031 

1040 
1037 
103S 
1030 

1044 

1032 

1037 

1041 



Shakespeare, William. Exhortation to courage Fav. 61 
Hamlet's soliloquy - - - Sha. 826 ; Fav. 98 

— — Merchant of Venice — an extract - - Fav. 290 

— — Spoils of time — sonnets - - - Fav. 17 

Violet, The - Sha. 1040; Flo. 384 

Violet bank, The - Sha. 166; Flo. 43 

Willow, The - Sha. 839; Flo. 143 

Woodbine Sha. 166; Flo. 133 

Shakespeare — a sonnet Lon. 365 

— Glossary to Sha. 1055 

■— Imitation of - Cow. 40 

— On - - - Mil. 419 



Shakespeare 
Sheathed 



456 



Shakespeare, Sonnet in a volume of - - Hood 164 

— Tercentenary of Hoi. 270 

Shakespeare's ghost --'--•_ Sen. 271 

Shall I begin with ah or oh? - - - -Cow. 48 

— I compare thee to a summer's day - - Sha. 1030 

— I lament thy lot? ------ Sch. 97 

— I not take mine ease - Sha. 399 

— I rebuke thee, ocean ----- Hood 180 

— I then silent be, or shall I speak - - Spe. 694 

— man to G-od a method show - - ' - - Wes. 291 

— the great soul of Newton - Tho. 406 

— the hag evil die with child - Ten. 471 

— the harp then be silent? - Moore 267 
Shallow, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - - Sha, 42 

— c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - - Sha. 409 
Shallot, Lady of ------ - Ten. 23 

Shame on this faithful heart! - Wor. 241 

— ■ upon you, Kobin Ten. 582 

— where is thy blush? ----- Sha. 832 
Shamrock, Poesy of the ; - - . - - Flo. 193 
Sharp misery had worn him - - - - Sha. 736 
Sharpe, Charles, Letter to Burns 448 
She behind yon mountain lives -* Goe. 70 

— blossomed in the country - Fav. 299 

— came and stood in the Old South - - - Whi. 408 

— came and went ------ Low. 90 

— came beneath the forest dome - - - Hoi. 41 

— came — she is gone Cow. 490 

— cannot end — a sonnet ----- Goe. 218 

— comes — Iberia's proud Armada - - Sch. 77 

— comes with fairy footsteps - - - - Fav. 320 

— dwells by great Kenhawa's side - - Lon. 42 

— dwelt among the untrodden ways - - Wor. 104 

— enamored of the sun - - - - Flo. 114 

— fair, divinely fair, fit love for gods - - Mil. 204 

— fanned my life out with her soft little sighs Mer. 267 

— fell asleep on Christmas eve - - - Eos. 103 

— floats upon the river of his thoughts - Lon. 56 

— fluted with her mouth as when one sips - Eos. 163 

— had a tall man's height or more - - Wor. 174 

— had been told that God made - - - Wil. 81 

— has a huswif 's hand Sha. 223 

— has beauty, but still you must keep - Moore 647 

— has gone, — she has left us in passion - Hoi. 153 

— has laughed as softly as if she sighed - - Bro. 295 

— hath the apple in her hand - - - Eos. 159 

— is a winsome wee thing - Burns 242 

— is a woman, therefore may be woo'd - Sha. 693 

— is dead ! they said to him - - - - Arn. 168 

— is far from land - - - Hood 543; Moore 237 



457 



Shakespeare 
Sheathed 



She is mine own. And I as rich - - - Sha. 28 

— is talking aesthetics, the dear clever creature Mer. 243 

— is unkind, unkind ! .___-.__ Mer. 204 

— knelt in prayer ! A stream - - - Hem. 192 

— left me at the silent time - She. 447 

— lives another's wishes to complete - - Wor. 663 

— loved me for the dangers - - - - Sha. 883 

— loves him, for her infinite soul - - - Eos. 255 

— may be fair, he sang Scott 323 

— never looked so kind before - - - Moore 176 

— never told her love Sha. 289 

— paints with white and red - Erne. 282 

— rose and let me in, " Remarks on - - Burns 31 2 

— rose from her untroubled sleep - - Wil. 259 

— rushed to meet him Bro. 177 

— said, and for her lost Galanthis - - Pope 436 

— sat like patience on a monument - - - Sha. 289 

— sat where on each wind that sighed - Hem. 398 

— saw ; she took ; she ate ----- Wes. 232 

— says she loves me best of all - - Burns 263 

— sings by her wheel at that low cottage door Whi. 46 

— sleeps ! my lady sleeps -'--'" Lon. 47 

— sought to breathe one word - Sch. 104 

— stepped upon Sicilian grass - Ing. 138 ; Flo. 35 

— stood before her father's gorgeous tent - Wil. 19 

— stood breast high amid the corn - - Hood 148 

— stood like an angel just wandered - - Fav. 54 

— stood up in the meekness of a heart - Wil. 70 

— stood upon the loftiest peak - Hem. 146 

— stoops to conquer — a comedy - - - Gol. 269 

— sung of love ------ Moore 274 

— thought by heaven's high wall - - - Ing. 460 

— twirled the string of golden beads Fav. 293 ; Hoi. 77 

— walks in beauty ------ Byron 111) 

— was a form of life and light - - - Byron 12 

— was a harlot and a thief - Mer. 247 

— was a phantom of delight - Wor. 171 

— was a woman in her freshest age - - Spe. 91 

— was an aged woman ; and the years - - She. 567 

— was but a child ------ Ing. 435 

— was good as she was fair - Eog. 221 

— was not as pretty as women I know - Bro. 599 

— was not there - - - ... Wil. 271 

— who ne'er answers till a husband cools - Pope 238 

— who sits by haunted well - Scott 438 

— who would rather die with him - - Moore 417 

— whose beauty was more than human - - Ros. 136 

— with distracted passion pines away - - Flo. 113 

— would hang on him, as if - - - - Sha. 814 
Sheathed their swords for lack - - - Sha. 448 



Sheddad 
Shelley 



458 



Sheddad, the son of Ad, of Hadramant - 

Sheep-washing— a sonnet 

Sheep's-head, On a— epigrams - 

Sheeted dead did squeak and gibber - 

Shelah O'Neil— a song - 

Shelley, Mary, To - 

SHELLEY, PERCY BYSSHE, Poems of: 

A gentle story of two lovers . . 504 Characters 

— golden-winged Angel stood . 501 
-- shovel of his ashes took . . 501 
Adonais— an elegy on death of 

John Keats .... 365 

Adonis, Death of— a fragment . 531 

Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude 84 

Allegory— A portal as of shad- 
owy adamant 

Anarchy. Masque of . 

And where is Truth?— a frag 
ment 

— who feels discord now of sor- 



P. of F. 


175 


Wor. 


331 


Burns 


181 


Sha. 


812 


Burns 


291 


She. 


503 



317 
504 



503 
410 
425 
437 
424 



Apennines. Passage of the . 

Apollo, Hymn of . 

Arabic. Imitation from the . 

Arethusa .... 

As the sunrise to the night — a 

fragment . . . .50 5 
At the creation of the earth . . 50 1 
Athanase, Prince . . . 452 
Autumn — a dirge .... 43.5 
Away ! the moon is dark . . 335 

Aaiola, The 440 

Bereavement .... 556 
Bigotry's Victim .... 565 
Bion. Death of— a fragment . 331 

— From— Death of Adonis . .531 

Blanc, Mont 400 

Boat on the Serchio, The . . 475 
Bonaparte, Fall of . . . .307 
Bridal Song, A . . . .442 
Bright wanderer, fair coquette of 

heaven .... 503 
Buona Notte. (Good-night. - ) . 577 
Bv-ron, Lord, Sonnet to . . 508 
Oalderon— Magico Prodigioso . 537 
Canceled passages . . . 574 
Canzone of the Convito . . .535 
Castlereagh Administration . 414 
Castor and Pollux, To . 521 

Cat, Verses on a . . . 553 

Cavalcanti, From Guido . .537 
Cenci, The— a play . . .268 
Characters : Ahasuerus, a Jew. 

Hellas 377 

— Albano, an usher . Tasso 457 

— Andrea, servant of Cenci. 

The Cenci 268 

— Apollo, Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Archy . Charles the First 484 

— Asia . Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Bostwick . Charles the First 491 

— Beatrice, daughter of Cenci. 

The Cenci 268 

— Bernardo, son of Francesco. 

The Cenci 268 

— Camillo. Cardinal " 268 

— Cenci, Count Francesco " 268 



Charles the First. 

Charles the First 484 

— Clarin . Magico Prodigioso 537 

— Colonna, Prince . The Cenci 268 

— Cottington, Lord. 
Charles the First 484 

— Cromwell, Oliver, " 492 

— Cyclops, The . The Cyclops 523 

— Cyprian . Magico Prodigioso 537 

— Dakry, a wizard. 
CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Daood . • • Hellas 377 

— Demogorgon. 
Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Demon . Magico Prodigioso 542 

— Earth, The, Prometheus Unb. 219 

— Faust . Scenes from Faust 546 

— Floro . Magico Prodigioso 540 

— Gabriel . Scenes from Faust 546 

— Gadfly, The, CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Giacomo, son of Francesco. 

The Cenci 268 

— Hampden . Charles the First 492 

— Hassan . . . Hellas 377 

— Hercules.Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Iona Taurina, Queen of Thebes. 

CEtlip is Tvrannus 323 

— lone . Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Jupiter, '• '• 219 

— Justina . Magico Prodigioso 543 

— Juxon . . Charles the First 491 

— Laoctonas. CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Laud, Archbishop. 

Charles the First 484 

— Leech, The, CErlipus Tvrannus 323 

— Leighton . Charles the First 48.3 

— Lelio . Magico Prodigioso 540 

— Lucretia, wife of Cenci. 

The Cenci 268 

— Lyttleton, Secretary. 

Charles the First 485 

— Maddalo, a courtier . Tasso 457 

— Mahmud . . . Hellas 377 

— Malpiglio, a poet . . Tasso 457 

— Mammon, arch-oriest of Fam- 

ine . CEdiuus Tyrannus 323 

— Marzio. an assassin, The Cenci 268 

— Mephistopheles. 

Scenes from Faust 546 

— Mercury, Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Michael . Scenes from Faust 546 

— Minotaur, The. 

CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Moscon . Magico Prodigioso 537 

— Moses, the sow-arelder. 

CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Ocean . Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Olimpio, an assassin. The Cenci 268 

— Orsino, a prelate. " 268 

— Panthea, Prometheus Unbound 219 



459 



Sheddaa 
Shelley 



Characters : Phantasm of Jupiter 

Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Pigna. a minister . Tasso 457 

— Prometheus. 

Prometheus (Inbound 219 

— Pym . Charles the First 492 
— - Pyrganax, a wizard. 

CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Raphael . Scenes from Faust 546 

— Eat, The . CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— St. John . Charles the First 484 

— Savella, the Pope's Legate. 

The Cenci 2G8 

— Silenus . . The Cyclops 523 

— Solomon, the porkman. 

CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Spirit of the Earth. 

Prometheus Unbound 219 

— Spirit of the Moon " 210 

— Spirits of the Hours " 219 

— Strafford, Lord. 

Charles the First 484 

— Swellf oot, King of Thebes. 

CEdipus Tyrannus 323 

— Ulysses . . The Cyclops 523 

— Vane, Sir Harrv. 

Charles the First 492 

— Williams. Bishop " 491 

— Zephaniah, a pig-butcher. 

CEdipus Tyrannus 323 
Charles the First— a fragment of 

a play 482 

Circumstance— an epigram . 533 
Cisma D'ingalaterra. (From Cal- 

deron.) .... 575 
Cloud. The . ... 426 

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. To . 394 
Come thou awakener of the spir- 
it's ocean .... 508 
Constantia. To .... 502 

— Singing, To ... . 405 

Critic. To a 409 

Cyclops. The— a satyric drama 523 
Daemon of the World, The . . 571 
Damnation. (Peter Bell the 

Third.) 310 

Dante. From .... 535 
Dead Violet, On a . . . .410 
Dear Home, thou scene . . 501 
Death .... 396, 406, 464 

— a dialogue 558 

— Vanquished .... 559 

— (Peter Bell the Third.) . . 305 
Desire, Love, Hope and Fear . 469 
Devil, The. (Peter Bell the 

Third.) . . . .306 
Devil's Walk, The— a ballad . . 569 
Direre for the Year . . . 436 

— Old winter was gone . . . 474 

— Rough wind that moanest . 447 
Double Damnation. (Peter Bell 

the Third.) . . . .313 
Earth. Mother of All, To . . 522 
England in 1819 . . . .415 
Epigrams from the Greek . . 533 
Epipsychidion .... 357 
Epitaphs: Gray's Elegy (in Latin) 554 

— These are two friends . . 448 
Epithalamium . . . 442, 576 
Euganean Hills, Written among 

the 203 



434. 



Evening 

Exhortation, An ... . 

Eyes 

Fading 

Faint with love, the lady of the 

South 

Falsehood and Vice— a dialogue 
Famine, Tower of . 
Far. far away .... 
Father's specter. The . 
Faust. Scenes from. (Goethe.) 
Fear, Love. Hope and Desire 
Feelings of a Republican on Fall 

of Bonaparte .... 
Fete at Carlton House 
Fiordispina . . 
Flourishing vine whose kindling 

clusters 

Follow to the deep wood's weeds 
For me, my friend . ... 
Fragment of unfinished drama 
Fugitives. The .... 
Genius, To his . 
Giborne, Maria, Letter to 
Ginevra .... 

God Save the Queen 
Godwin, Fanny. Lines on . 

— Mary Wollstonecraf t. To . 
Good-night . 

Grace. (Peter Bell the Third.) 
Gray's Elegy — epitaph in Latin . 
Great Spirit, whom the sea of 

boundless .... 
Hark! the owlet flaps his wings 

Harriet, To 

Hate-song, A 

He wonders (like a day appearing 

Heaven. Ode to . .. 

Hell. (Peter Bell the Third.) 

Hellas — a lyric drama 

His face was kke a snake's . 

Homer. Hymns of 

Honesty (fxv.)— a fragment . 

Hope, Love, Desire and Fear . 

How sweet is it to sit and read . 

Hymn to Intellectual Beauty . 

Hymns of Homer .... 

I am as a spirit who has dwelt . 

— am drunk with the honey-wine 

— dreamed that Milton's' spirit 

rose 

— faint, I perish with my love . 

— fear thy kisses, gentle maiden 

— went into the deserts of dim 

sleep . . . ' . 

— would not be a king 

If I walk in Autumn's eve . 
In Horologium (Latin) 

— the cave which wild weeds 

cover 

Indian Serenade. The . 
Intellectual Beauty. Hymn to . 
Invitation, The (to Jane) 
Ireland, To . . 
Is it that in some brighter sphere 

— not to-day enough? 

Islam. Revolt of ... . 

Isle, The 

Jane. To 444, 

Julia and Maddalo— a conversa- 
tion 



475 
418 
571 
557 



60 

433 
437 
557 
546 
469 



397 
468 



503 

503 
501 
478 
437 
466 
341 
472 
415 
409 
451 
577 
310 
554 

508 
554 
31 
574 
507 
416 
306 
375 
507 
509 
505 
469 
505 
399 
509 
505 
504 

507 
508 
429 

506 
472 
440 

558 

505 
418 
399 
444 
569 
506 
505 
95 
508 
446 

£07 



Shelley 
She's 



460 



in Gray's 



Keats, John, On death of 

On . 

Kings .... 
Lake-storm, The 
Lament, A . . 
Latin verses— Epitaph 

Elegy . 
Lechdale churchyard 
Lerici, In the Bay of . 
Liberty 

— Ode to 

— Ode to Assertors of 
Lift not the painted veil— a sonnet 
Lord Chancellor, To the 

Love 

— Hope, Desire and Fear 
Love's Philosophy 

— Rose 

Magico Prodigioso of Calderon 
Magnetic Lady to her patient 
Marenghi . . . . 
Marianne's Dream . 

Mary, To, who died in this opinion 
Masque of Anarchy 
Matilda gathering Flowers 
Medusa of Leonardo da Vinci, On 

the 

Men of England, Song to the 
Mercury, Hymn to 
Methought I was a billow 
Mexican Revolution, The , 
Minerva, To 

Misery 

Mont Blanc 

Moon, To the— a fragment 

— Hymn to the 

— Waning— a fragment 
Moonbeam, To the . 
Moschus, From . 
Mother and Son 
Music 

— when soft voices die . 
Mutability .... 
My dearest May, wherefore hast 

thou gone .... 

— head is heavy— a fragment 

— head is wild with weeping . 

— thoughts arise and fade . 
Naples, Ode to ... 

— Written near .... 
Napoleon, On hearing of death of 

— On the Fall of ... 
Nile, Sonnet to the 

No, Music, thou art not . 

O, mighty mind— a fragment . 

— that a chariot of cloud were 

mine 

— thou immortal deity . 

— thou whose dear love gleamed 
Ode to the Assertors of Liberty . 
CEdipus Tyrannus — a tragedy . 
Once more descend— a fragment 
One sung of thee who left the tale 

— word is too often profaned . 

Orpheus 

Otho 

Ozymandias— a sonnet 

Pan, Echo and the Satyr 

— Hymn of 

Passage of the Apennines 
Past, The - 



477, 
395* 



People of England— a fragment . 505 
Peter Bell the Third ... 303 
Plato, From, to Stella . . .533 

— Spirit of— an epigram . . 533 
Plays: Cenci, The . ■ . . .268 

— Charles the First— a fragment 482 

— Cyclops, The— a satyric drama 523 

— Faust, Scenes from. (Goethe.) 546 

— Hellas— a lyric drama . . 375 

— Magico Prodigioso, Scenes 

from 537 

— CEdipus Tyrannus— a tragedy 323 

— Prometheus Unbound . . 217 
Political Greatness— a sonnet . 439 
Prince Athanase .... 452 
Prologue to Hellas . . . 470 
Prometheus Unbound . . .217 
Proserpine, Song of . . . 429 
Queen Mab— a philosophical poem 31 
Question, The .... 426 
Rarely, rarely, comest thou . . 438 
Recollection, The (to Jane) . 445 
Remembrance .... 440 
Reviewer, Lines to a . . . 432 
Revolt of Islam, The ... 95 
Rome has fallen— a fragment . 505 
Rosalind and Helen— an eclogue 189 
Saint Irvyne's Tower . . . 557 
Sea, Vision of the . . . .461 
Sensitive Plant, The ... 336 
Serchio, Boat on the . . . 475 
Shelley, Mary, To 503 

— William, To . . 408, 460, 504 
Silence! ob, well are Death and 

Sleep 503 

Similes for two Politicians . 415 
Sin. (Peter Bell the Third.) . . 308 
Singing . . . . . .574 

Sister Rosa 555 

Skylark, To a . . . .427 
Sleep (lxxix.)— a fragment . . 506 
Solitary, The .... 558 
Sonnets: Byron, To . . .508 

— Cavalcanti to Dante . . 537 

— Dante to Cavalcanti . . . 535 

— Lift not the painted veil . 411 

— Nile, To the . . . , . 406 

— Ozymandias .... 406 

— Political Greatness . , . .439 

— Ye hasten to the Grave . .431 
Stacey, Sophia, Written for . . 419 

Star, To a 566 

Stella, To, from Plato . . .533 
Such hope as is the sick despair 506 
Summer and Winter . . . 432 

— Evening Churchyard . . 396 

Sun, To the 521 

Sunset, The 398 

Tasso, Scene from .... 457 

— Song for 457 

Tear, The 564 

That time is dead forever . . 409 
The babe is at peace . . . 508 

— cold earth slept below . . 397 

— fierce beasts of the woods . 503 

— fight was over .... 501 

— fitful alternations of the rain . 505 

— gentleness of rain was in the 

wind 507 

— rude wind is singing . . 507 

— world is dreary . . . .504 



461 



Shelley 
She's 



501 



There is a warm and gentle at- 
mosphere .... 

This morn thy gallant bark 

Those whom nor power— a frag- 
ment 

Thy dewy looks sink in my 

breast 500 

Time 433 

— long past 434 

To thirst and to find no fill . . 502 

— morrow 440 

— night 436 

Tower of Famine, The . . 433 
Translations . . . .509 

Triumph of Life .... 493 
Two Spirits, The— an allegory . 429 
Unrisen splendor of the brightest 

sun 506 

Venus, To the goddess . . 520 
Victoria . ... . . . 554 

Virgil, From, Tenth eclogue . 531 
Vision of the Sea . . .461 
Viviani, Emilia, To 437 



Wake the serpent not ... 505 
Wandering Jew, The . . . 557 
Waning Moon, The ... 506 
We meet not as we parted . . 493 
Wealth and dominion fade . 502 
West Wind, Ode to the . . .417 
What art thou, presumptuous . 507 

— men gain f airly— a fragment . 505 
When a lover clasps his fairest 508 

— passion's trance is over-past . 441 

— soft winds and sunny skies . 508 

— the lamp is shattered . . 444 
Williams, Edward, To . 440 
Winter, Summer and . . . 432 
Witch of Atlas, The ... 345 
Woodman and the Nightingale . 456 
Wordsworth, William, To . . 397 
World's Wanderers, The . . 464 
Ye yentle visitations of calm 

thought 504 

— hasten to the Grave— a sonnet 434 
Yet look on me — a fragment . 500 
Zucca, The . . . . . .477 



Shelley, Percy B. Amaranth, The 

Autumn - - - - 

Bouquet of violets - 

Love's philosophy 

Opening year, The - 

Question, The - 

Sensitive plant, The 

Serenade, The - 

Sunflower, The 

To a fading violet 

World's wanderers 

Shelley, Percy B. , After lecture on 

— — Sonnet on - 
Shelley, William, To - 
Shepherd lady, The 

— of Israel, hear 

— of king Admetus - - . 

— Old, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - 

— or huntsman ----- 

— who with thine amorous, sylvan song 
Shepherd's calendar, The - - 

— lament — a song - - 

— prayer, A ----- - 

— preference," Remarks on 

— tale, The ------ 

Sheridan, Mrs. Heart's-ease - 

— Richard B., Death of - 
Monody on death of - 

Sonnet to 

Sheriff -Muir, Battle of 

Sherman's in Savannah - 

She's beautiful, and therefore to be woo'd 

— fair and fause — a song 



Flo. 182 

Fav. 418 

Flo. 43 

Fav. 256 

Flo. 31G 

Flo. 135 

Flo. 503 

Fav. 183 

Flo. 149 



40 

84 

129 



She. 



- Flo 
Fav 

- Hoi 
Ros. 296 

408, 460, 504 

Ing. 506 

- Wes. 91 
Low. 44 

- Sha. 469 
Rog. 252 



16 

517 

55 

68 



- Lon 

Spe, 

- Goe 
P. of F, 

Burns 332 

Scott 458 

- Flo. 81 
Moore 594 
Byron 275 

Col. 95 

Burns 223 

Hoi. 221 

- Sha. 491 
Burns 241 



She's a ni) 

Sigourney ttu^a 

She's fresh as the spring, and sweet - Burns 309 

— up and gone — a ballad - Hood 149 
Shield of Achilles described - - - - Iliad 389 

— The - - - Moore 99 

Shillaber, B. P. A picture - - - Fa v. 287 

" The sagamore Fav. 194 

Shine out, stars, let heaven assemble - Moore 657 

— soft, ye trembling tears of light - - Hoi. 128 

— ye stars of heaven - - - - - - Pro. 67 

Shines the last age, the next with hope - Erne. 242 

Shining light, The ------ Cow. 72 

— stars - - - - - - - Pro. 67 

Ship-builders, The ------ Whi. 112 

— of state, The ------ Hoi. 315 

— The. (Southey.) ----- - Fav. 77 

Shipley, Thomas, To memory of - - - Whi. 74 

Ships are but boards Sha. 184 

— Catalogue of the - - - - - - Iliad 85 

Shipwrecked solitary's song - - - White 271 

Shirley, Lady Frances, To - Pope 400 

Shoemaker, The - - - - - - - Whi. 113 

Shoot, if you must, this old gray head - Whi. 270 

Shore, Edward ------- Cra. 104 

— The ------- Mer. 271 

Short is the space that gods and men - - Hoi. 64 

— of stature, large of limb - Lon. 253 
Shortness of human life ----- Cow. 611 
Should any one there in Rome - - - Lon. 387 

— auld acquaintance be forgot - - - Burns 213, 334 

— e'er the loveless days ----- Goe. 236 

— he ever be a suitor ----- Bro. 101 

— I have answered Caius - Sha. 781 

— I long that dark were fair - - - - Eliot 164 

— I wade no more returning - - - - Sha. 800 

— such a man too fond to rule alone - - Pope 270 

— these songs, love, as they fleet - - - Goe. 64 

— those fond hopes ------ Moore 523 

— you ask me whence these stories - - - Lon. 141 
Shouldst thou — and thou should st - - Byron 268 
Shout, for a mighty victory is won - - - Wor. 274 

— for England ! ho ! for England - - - Ten. 473 
Shove off, there ! — ship the rudder, Bill - - Hood 592 
Show-day at Battle Abbey, 1876 - - - Ten. 615 

— his eyes and grieve his heart - - - Sha. 802 

— me the noblest youth of present time - Wor. 199 
Shrewd Willie Smellie to Crochallan - Burns 178 
Shrine, The - - - - - - - Moore 89 

Shrines of Mary, The ------ Pro. 400 

Shrinking from the cold hand of death - Wes. 241 

Shrubbery, The - - - • - - - - Cow. 438 



j^o She's 

ttoo Sigourney 

Shrubs there are that at the call - - - Flo. 175 

Shun evil, follow good ----- Arn. 131 

— not this rite, neglected - Wor. 377 
Shunammite, The ------ Wil. 15 

Shut, shut the door, good John ! - Pope 264 

— up in measureless content - Sha. 793 
Shy lock, a rich Jew, c. in Mer. of Venice - Sha. 181 
Si descendero in internum ----- Low. 63 
Sibilla palmifera — a sonnet - Ros. 158 

Sibylline leaves - Col. 132 

Sic a reptile was Wat ----- Burns 187 

— a wife as Willie had— a song - - Burns 240 
Siccine tentasti ccelo donasse Iacobson - Mil. 531 
Sicilian captive, The ------ Hem. 386 

— muse, begin a loftier strain - - - Vir. 26 

— song --------- Goe. 74 

Sicilian's tale ------ Lon. 243, 273, 304 

Sicinius Velutus, c. in Coriolanus - - - Sha. 654 

Sick-bed, A ------ - Bry. 242 

— chamber, In a - - - - - - - Rog. 340 

Sickness and sorrow, In Wes. 134 

— For one in - Wes. 132 

Siddons, Mrs., Sonnet to - Col. 96 

To be spoken by -,---- Rog. 336 

Sidney, Sir Philip, Epitaphs on - Spe. 641, 642 

Pastorals on death of - - - Spe. 628, 636 

Siebel, c. in Faust ------ Faust 22 

Siege of Corinth - Byron 64 

— of Kazan - - Lon. 337 

— of Valencia — a play Hem. 433 

Sierra, Pass of the - - - - - - Whi. 212 

Siesta, The. (From the Spanish.) - - - Bry. 144 

Sifting of Peter ------ Lon. 399 

Sigh no more, ladies ------ Sha. 118 

— on, sad heart — a ballad - Hood 151 

— The - Col. 34 

Sighing Strephon, To the - - - - Byron 157 

— that nature formed but one such man Byron 276 
Sighs and groans ------ Her. 169 

Sigifred, an officer, c. in Otho the Great - Keats 333 

Sigismonda and Guiscardo - Dry. 434 

Signaculo erucis, De - - - - - - Her. 563 

Signor Luigi, said the Jew - Lon. 309 

Signs of the Lord - - - - - P. of F. 35 

— Sura of the - - - - - - P. of F. 125 

Sigourney, Mrs. Lydia H. Advertisement of 

a lost day ------ Fav. 245 

Bride, The - - Fav. 79 

Cowslip, The ----- - Flo. 27 

Faithful dog, The - Fav. 60 



Sigourney AfiA 

Sins * v± 

Sigourney, Mrs. Lydia H. Farewell to the 

flowers - - Flo. 272 

Know thyself - - - - - - Fav. 210 

Lilac, The Flo. 175 

Sigrid, Queen, the haughty - Lon. 248 

Silence, a country justice, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 Sha. 409 

Silence - - Hood 167 ; Mer. 206 ; Poe 88 ; Pope 446 

— augmenteth grief Spe. 642 

— coeval with eternity ----- Pope 446 

— deep rules o'er the waters - Goe. 224 

— is the perfectest herald of joy - - - Sha. 117 

— loved one, my heart ----- Goe. 225 

— of death — portentous calm - White 264 

— oh, well are death and sleep - She. 503 

— that dreadful bell Sha. 890 

— ye troubled waves ! Mil. 163 

— ye wolves, while Ralph - Pope 156 
Silent and mournful sat Hem. 351 

— I sat dejected and alone - Cow. 558 

— multitude. (Mrs. Hemans,) - - - Fav. 225 

— noon — a sonnet - - Eos. 236 

— O Moyle, be the roar Moore 224 

— woman, " At acting of ----- Dry. 520 
Silently one by one in the infinite meadows Lon. 101 
Silenus, c. in The Cyclops.- ... - She. 523 

— a pastoral ------- Vir. 34 

Silius, an army officer, c. in Ant. and Cleop. Sha. 911 

Silk-worm, The ------ Cow. 605 

Silva, Don, c. in Spanish Gypsy - - - Eliot 184 

— was marching homeward • Eliot 237 
Silvia, beloved of Valentine - - - Sha. 21 
Silvius, a shepherd, c. in As You Like It - Sha. 205 
Simes, Miss Louisa. Dedication of schoolhouse Fav. 236 
Similes for two politicians - She. 415 
Simmer's a pleasant time — a song - - Burns 230 
Simon Danz has come home again - - Lon. 373 

— Lee, the old huntsman ----- Wor. 414 

— Renard, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 
Simonides, c. in Pericles ----- Sha. 977 

— Fragment of - Bry. 138 

Simpcox, an impostor, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - Sha. 496 

Simple, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - Sha. 42 

Simple peasant, The Sch. 315 

— trust. (Mme. Guy on.) - Cow. 643 
Simplicity in habits, truth in speech - - Wor. 532 

— To— a sonnet Col. 100 

Simplon Pass, The - Wor. 170 

— — Composed in the ----- Wor. 302 
Simpson, Williams, Epistle to - - - Burns 155 
Sin Her. 147; Lon. 93; She. 308 



465 I!iT moy 

Sin enslaved me many years -.-"-- Cow. 87 

— has undone our wretched race - - - Cow. 67 

— of self-love possesseth all - ■ ..- - - Sha. 1035 

— of sins ------- P. of F. Ill 

— Vision of Ten. 115 

Sinai, Scheik of ----- Ayt. 194 

Since --------- Mer. 195 

— all, that beat about in nature's range - Col. 219 

— Athens first began to draw mankind - - Tho. 476 

— brass, nor stone, nor earth - Sha. 1036; Fa v. 19 

— faction ebbs, and rogues grow out - - Dry. 497 

— first thy word ------ Moore 350 

— here we are set in array round - - - Scott 379 

— I did leave the presence of my love - - Spe. 702 

— I have lacked the comfort - Spe. 702 

— I have lost, have loved - Sha. 277 

— I have no lands or houses - Pro. 244 

— I left you mine eye ----- Sha. 1041 

— life in sorrow must be spent - Cow. 631 

— Lord to thee ------ Her. 123 

— my sadness into gladness - Her. 247 

— now the hour is come ----- Byron 134 

— on life's hospitable sea ----- Fav. 429 

— on the downs our flocks together feed - Vir. 29 

— our country, our God — oh, my sire ! - Byron 191 

— risen from ocean, ocean to defy - - Wor. 404 

— robbed of all that charmed my view - Burns 322 

— still my passion-pleading strains - - Flo. 48 

— the refinement of this polished age - Byron 155 

— there is hope for man only in man - - Arn. 79 

— there is magic in your look - - - - Cam. 254 

— thou readest in her what thou thyself - Sch. 247 

— what I lend or give to Thee - Wes. 267 
Sinclair. Sir John, Letter to - - - - Burns 447 
Sinful angels, The - - - - - P. of F. 15 
Sing, muse, if such a theme, so dark - - Cow. 102 

— muse, the son of Maia and of Jove - - She. 509 

— no more in mournful tones - - - Goe. 408 

— on, sweet thrush, upon the leafless. Burns J 41 ; Flo. 317 

— sing — music was given - Moore 275 

— sing in memory of the brave departed - Hem. 379 

— them upon the sunny hills - - - Hem. 345 
Singer, The ------- Whi. 371 

Singers, The ------- Lon. 134 

Singing --------- She. 574 

— as if enamored, she resumed - - - Dante 222 

— leaves, The Low. 337 

Sinner, The ------- Her. 119 

Sinners, turn, why will you die? - - - Wes. 209 

Sins round ------- Her. 209 

30 



fc 466 

Sion - - Her. 197 

Sir clerk of Oxenford, our hoste sayde - Cha. 232 

— Eustace Grey ------- Cra. 499 

— Galahad - Ten. 106 

— Hudson Lowe, Sir Hudson Lowe - - Moore 608 

— Launcelot and queen Guinever - - Ten. 114 

— Launf al, Vision of - - - - - - Low. 107 

— Oiaf lie rideth over the plain - - - Lon. 29 

— Plume, of amber snuff-box justly vain - . Pope 79 

— Thopas, Tale of ----- Cha. 406 

— - Walter Vivian all a summer's day - - Ten. ili) 

— Wisdom's a fool when he's fou - - - Burns 57 

— Wit. who is so much esteemed - - - Goe. 241 

— as your mandate did request - Burns 79 

— o'er a gil I gat your card - Burns 165 

— when I flew to seize the bird - - - Cow. 503 
Sir. See also surnames in general alphabet. 

Sirens, Scyila and Charybclis - - - Odys. 172 

— The --------- Low. 2 

Sirion, c. in Judas Maccabseus - - - Lon. 328 

Sister, first shake we off the dust we have - Eos. 300 

— Helen -------- Eos. 83 

— Letter to his - - - - - - White 183 

— of love-lorn poets, Philomel! - - - Col. 50 

— of the first-born light - - - - - Goe. 41 

— Eosa -------- She. 555 

— said busy Amelotte ----- Eos. 112 

— To my - - - - - - Whi. 144 ; Wor. 413 

Sisters of Scio, The - , Hem. 222 

— sisters! who sent you here? - - - Col. 145 

— The ------ Ten. 36, 696; Whi. 375 

— The— a picture by Barry - - - - Whi. 249 

— The, Epilogue to ----- Gol. 142 

— two, all praise to you - - - - ' - Low. 61 
Sits the wind in that corner - Sha. 119 
Siward, c. in Macbeth ----- Sha. 788 

— Young, c. in Macbeth ----- Sha. 788 
Six among the courtiers favored - Goe. 387 

— changeful years have vanished - - - Wor. 544 

— hundred years ago, in Dante's time - - Eliot 73 

— months to six years added he remained - Wor. 489 

— thankful weeks, and let it be - - - Erne. 313 

— thousand veterans practiced in war's game Wor. 260 
Sixth battle, The ------ Iliad 333 

Size, The - - Her. 234 

Skater's song (anon.) Fav. 103 

Skeleton in armor, The - - - Lon. 25 ; Fav. 357 

Skeptic, The— a satire ----- Moore 293 

Skepticism ------- Moore 603 

Skerry of shrieks. The ----- Lon. 249 



467 Sion 



Sketch, A Byron 223 

— inscribed to C. J. Fox -...-.- Burns 117 

— New Year's day ----- Burns 123 

— of a character Burns 106 

Skim-milk has its own opinions - Low. 273 

Skinner, Cyriac, Sonnet to - Mil. 481 

— Eev. John, Letters to - Burns 386, 397 
Skipper Ireson's ride ----- Whi. 225 

Skipping rope, The - Ten. 484 

Skirmish of wit Sha. Ill 

Skull, On a cup made from a - - - Byron 229 
Sky lark, -To a - She. 427; Wor. 149, 190 

— prospect — from plain of France— a sonnet Wor. 305 
Slander, whose edge is sharper than the sword Sha. 958 
Slave in the Dismal Swamp - Lon. 42 

— singing at midnight - - - • - - Lon. 42 

— ships, The ------- Whi. 43 

-The -------- Moore 644 

— to no sect, who takes no private rpad - Pope 219 

— trade, Abolition of — a sonnet - - - Wor. 276 
Slavery, Death of - - - - - - Bry. 317 

— Poems on ------ - Lon. 41 

— Stanzas on - Whi. 45 

Slave's dream, The - Lon. 41 

— lament, The — a song - Burns 247 

— of Martinique, The ----- Whi. 77 

— Song of, in the desert ----- Whi. 200 
Slayer, The - - P. of F. 126 
Sleep ----- tag. 465; Lon. 367; She. 506 

— and time Ing. 514 

— at last has fled these eyes - Cow. 639 

— baby mine, enkerchieft on my bosom - White 317 

— bringing poppy, by the plowman - - Flo. 124 

— comrades, sleep and rest - - - - Lon. 408 

— dwell upon thine eyes, peace in thy breast ! Sha. 721 

— in dull cold marble Sha. 612 

— little babe, on my knee ----- Bro. 595 

— midst thy banners furled ! - - - Hem. 342 

— O gentle sleep, nature's soft nurse - - Sha. 422 

— on and dream of heaven awhile - - Rog. 239 

— on, baby, on the floor ----- Bro. 107 

— Pains of ------- Col. 209 

— shall, neither night nor day - Sha. 789 

— sleep, mine holy one ----- Bro. 62 

— sleep on ! forget thy pain ... - She. 443 

— sweet babe ! my cares beguiling - - Col. 199 

— that knits up the Sha. 794 

— The ------- Bro. 70 

— the sleep that knows not breaking - - Scott 116 

— To— sonnets ------ Wor. 228 



Sleeper 468 

Sleeper of Marathon, The Hem. 263 

— The - - Poe 89 

Sleeping and waking, Oh, defend me still ! - Sha. 588 

— and watching Bro. 107 

— beauty, The - - Ten. 102 

— child, Sonnet to a Hood 183 

— palace, The Ten. 101 

Sleepless dreams — a sonnet - Ros. 246 

Sleeplessness ------- Ros. 290 

Sleep'st thou or wak'st thou, fairest creature? Burns 264 

Sleet ! and hail ! and thunder ! - - - - Hood 168 

Slender, c. in Merry Wives of Windsor - • Sha. 42 

Slighted Minerva's learned tongue - - - Erne. 278 

Sloan, Thomas, Letter to Burns 470 

Slow comes the hour ; its passing speed how Cow. 456 

— sailed the weary mariners - Ten. 17, 475 

— sinks, more lovely, ere his race be run Byron 199 

— toiling upward from my misty vale - Hoi. 248 
Slowly the hour-hand of the clock moves round Lon. 383 

— the mist o'er the meadow was creeping - Hoi. 29 

— and sleep, two brethren - G-oe. 269 
Small celandine, The - Wor. 147, 484 

— cheer and great welcome makes a merry feast Sha. 98 

— choice in rotten apples - Sha. 233 

— people -------- Mer. 267 

— service is true service while it lasts - Wor. 458 
Smallest worm will turn ----- Sha. 534 
Smellie, William, Extempore on - - - Burns 178 

Letter to ----- - Burns 474 

Smile of the moon ! for so I name - - Wor. 107 

Smiling listener, The Hoi. 229 

— spring comes in rejoicing — a song - - Burns 241 
Smith, Charlotte. Close of spring - - - Flo. 457 
Green-house rose Flo. 305 

— — To the humming-bird ... - Flo. 127 
Smith, Mrs. E. Oakes. Flowers - - - Flo. 468 

Teachings of Eva ----- Flo. 468 

Smith, Horace. Hymn to the flowers - Flo. 439 

— James, Letters to - - - Burns 355, 376, 378, 405 
Epistle to Burns 161 

— — Epitaph on - - - - - - Burns 177 

Smith, Sarah L. P. White roses - - - Flo. 387 

— the weaver, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 - - Sha. 496 
Smooth and ever clear, and crystal-bright Sch. 189 

— as monumental alabaster - Sha. 906 

— runs the water where --.-..- Sha. 508 
Smoothly and lightly the golden seed - Goe. 268 
Snail, The ------- Cow. 609 

Snake, The ------- Moore 170 

Snapper-up of inconsiderable trifles - - Sha. 318 



469 | 1 eeper 

.Snaru c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 ... - Sha. 409 

Snout, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 161 

Snug, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - - Sha. 161 

Snow-bound — a winter idyl - Whi. 286 

Snow-drop monument Ing. 457 

— Poesy of the Flo. 19 

-- The (anon.) Flo. 24 

— The. (Howitt.) Flo. 20 

— The. (Robinson.) - Flo. 24 

— The. (Westwood.) ----- Flo. 19 

— The. (Wordsworth.) ----- Flo. 20 

— To a— a sonnet - Wor. 236 

— To the. (Keble.) - - - - - - Flo. 21 

— To the. (B. W. Procter.) - Flo. 527 
Snow-flakes Lon. 227 

— mountain — a sonnet Ing. 464 

— shower, The - Bry. 225 

— spirit, The ------- Moore 140 

— storm, The - - - Erne. 42 ; Fav. 43 ; Flo. 293 
So all day long the noise of battle rolled - Ten. 60 

— all this gallant blood has gushe .1 in vain ! - Cam. 242 

— am I as the rich, whose blessed key — a sonnet Sha. 1034 

— are you to my thoughts as food to life - Sha. 1037 

— at length, once more we meet - - - Sch. 113 

— bright is thy beauty, so charming - - Pope 375 

— every sweet with sour is tempered still - Spe. 691 

— fair, so sweet, withal so sensitive - - Wor. 437 

— fair, so young, so innocent, so sweet - Dry. 319 

— fallen ! so lost ! the light withdrawn - - Whi. 146 

— for a good old-gentlemanly vice - - Byron 338 

— full of artless jealousy ----- Sha. 836 

— glide my life away ! and so at last - - Cow. 364 

— have I heard and do in part believe it - Sha. 812 

— Hector said, and sea-like roared his host Ten. 396 

— I am safe emerged from these broils ! - Keats 333 

— is it not with me as with that muse — a sonnet Sha. 1030 

— it is, my dear ------ R s. 106 

— Joseph, yet a youth, expounded well - - Dry. 267 

— lady Flora, take my lay - Ten. 104 

— lifted up in spirit, he moved away - - Ten. 346 

— live that when thy summons - Bry. 23 ; Fav. 244 

— many hours must I tend my flock - - Sha. 536 

— may he rest ; his faults ----- Sha. 614 

— much hast thou of thy hoard - - P. of F. 82 

— now I have confessed that he is thine - Sha. 1044 

— now my summer task is ended, Mary - - She. 99 

— now, then, summer's over — by degrees - Mer. 255 

— oft as homeward I from her depart - - Spe. 696 

— oft as I her beauty do behold - - - Spe. 696 

— oft have I invoked thee for my muse - Sha. 1037 



So 
Some 



470 



So passed the strong heroic soul away - - Ten. 

— perish all, whose breast ne'er learned - Pope 

— pestered with a popinjay --"_._ Sha. 

— quick bright things come to confusion - Sha. 

— ravishingly soft upon the tide - - White 

— runs my dream: but what am I? - - Ten. 

— saith he, when noontide fervors flout him - Ing. 

— sang he : and as meeting rose - - - Eos. 

— saying, her rash hand in evil hour - - Mil. 

— saying, light-foot Iris passed away - - Ten. 

— shall I live, supposing thou art true - Sha. 

— she who doth imparadise my soul - Dante 

— shines a good deed in a naughty world - Sha. 

— shipwrecked passengers escaped to land - Dry. 

— spake Esaias : so in words of flame - - Whi. 

— spake the Son of God, and Satan stood - Mil. 

— spoke the guardian of the Trojan state - Iliad 

— still glide we down to the sea - - - Scott 

— stood of old the holy Christ - - - Whi. 

— sweet and voluble is his discourse - - Sha. 

— the gray boatswain of Twenty-nine - - Hoi. 

— the struck eagle stretched upon the plain Byron 

— the winter now closed round them - - Goe. 

— then — the Vandals of our isle - - - Cow. 

— this is all the utmost reach - - - Whi. 

— warmly we met ----- Moore 

— warred both armies on the ensanguined shore Iliad 

— we grew together? ----- gha. 

— were mine eyes inebriate with view - Dante 

— when pleasure's dream is gone - - - Fav. 

— when the Savior shows his face - - Wes. 

— wise, so young, they say, do never live long Sha. 

— woman born to dignify retreat 

— you have nothing, niece, to ask me? - 

— you think you love me, do you ? 
Sobieski, John (Siege of Vienna) — a sonnet 
Social meeting, Ode for a - - - - 
Sofa, The. (Task.) .--•-- 
Soft and softlier hold me, friends - 

— as a cloud - - - - - - 

— is the strain when zephyr gently blows • 

— lettered is the new-year's lamb-ing fold 

— skies of Italy ! how richly drest 

— soft be thy sleep in the land of the west 

— spread the southern summer night - 

— stillness and the night become 
Softly breathes the west wind beside 

— softly blow the breezes .... 

— when warm gales are stealing 
Soger Laddie," Remarks on - 



Fav. 
Col. 
Pro. 

- Wor. 

Hoi. 

- Cow. 
Erne. 

-Wor. 
Pope 

- Ros. 
Hem. 

- Mer. 
Scott 

- Sha. 

- Bry. 
White 

Faust 
Burns 



356 

91 
385 
162 
315 
193 
516 
252 
212 
724 
1039 
339 
202 
481 
248 
320 
171 

71 
393 
140 
226 
186 
371 
395 

53 
522 
333 
171 

99 
178 
243 
571 
238 
556 
195 
286 
176 
247 
220 
392 

50 
299 
334 
253 
394 
202 
266 
257 
172 
336 



Some 

Sokokis, Funeral tree of the - Whi. 31 

Soldier of Christ, adieu ! Wes. 149 

— rest! thy warfare o'er ----- Scott 116 

— wake. (Betrothed.) ----- Scott 448 
Soldier's consolation — an epigram - - - Goe. 222 

— death-bed, The ------ Hem. 230 

— dream, The - - Cam. 161 

— song - - - - - - - - Scott 152 

— widow, The ------- Wil. 288 

Sole listener, Duddon !— a sonnet - - - Wor. 328 

Solemnly, mournfully - - - - - Lon. 94 

Solferino, Forced recruit at - - - - Bro. 614 

Solid pudding against empty praise - - Pope 123 

Soliloquy of Hamlet - - - Sha. 826; Fav. 98 

Solinus, c. in Comedy of Errors - - - Sha. 93 

Solitary reaper, The ----- Wor. 257 

— The - - - - She. 558; Wil. 294; Wor. 610 
Solitude. (Byron.) Fav. 122; Goe. 269; White 361 

— Hymn on - - - -"■•■.- - - Tho. 416 

— Lucy Gray ; or - Wor. 82 

— Ode on - • - - Pope 358 

— of Binnorie ------- Wor. 148 

— On reading the poem - White 223 

— Spirit of— a sonnet ----- Byron 254 

— Tears in -------- Col. 139 

Solomon, c. in CEdipus Tyrannus - - - She. 323 

— and the ant ------ P. of F. 17 

— and the ants ------ Whi. 413 

— King - - - Mer. 279 

Solomon's signet - - - - - - P. of F. 144 

Solution - - - - - - - Erne. 189 

Soma, Brewing of ----- Whi. 373 

Some are born great, some achieve - - - Sha. 291 

— books are lies from end to end - - - Burns 39 

— Cupid kills with arrows, some - - - Sha. 121 

— dreams we have are nothing else but dreams Hood 106 

— feelings are to mortals given - - - Scott 122 

— fragment from his dream of human life - Wor. 499 

— general maxims, or be right - Pope 224 

— glory in their birth, some in their skill - Sha. 1039 

— griefs are med'cinable - Sha. 956 

— hae meat and canna eat - - - Burns 183 

— ladies love the jewels in love's zone - - Ros. 230 

— of nature's journeymen had - - - - Sha. 827 

— of us will smart for it - - Sha. 129 

— of your hurts you have cured - - - Erne. 241 

— prisoned moon in steep cloud fastnesses - Ros. 257 

— rise by sin and some by virtue fall - - Sha. 71 

— say, fairest ladies, Faint-heart never won Byron 243 

— say that ever 'gainst that season - - Sha. 812 



Some 4 h .7 

Songs ** ' u 

Some say that in the origin of things - - Cow. 346 

— say thy fault is youth ; some wantonness Sha. 1039 

— smack of age in you ----- Sha. 412 

— sort of heart I know is hers - - - Low. 86 

— to Aonian lyres of silver sound - - - Wor. 262 

— to church repair, not for the doctrine - Pope 49 

— to our Hero have a hero's name - - Cra. 188 

— village Hampden that with dauntless breast Fav. 32 

— wee short hour ayont the twal - - Burns 41 

— words are played on golden strings - - Pro. 198 

— years ago a dark-eyed maid - Flo. 77 
Somerset, Duke of (John Beaufort), c. in Henry 

vi, pt. 1 - - - - - - - Sha. 469 

Somerville, Sir John, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 3 - Sha. 526 

Something cheap. (Charles Swain.) - - Fav. 213 

— childish but very natural - Col. 163 

— is rotten in the state of Denmark - - Sha. 817 

— left undone ------- Lon. 227 

— the heart must have to cherish - Lon. 391 
Sometime the world so stedfast was and stable Cha. 596 

— we see a cloud that's dragonish - - - Sha. 936 
Sometimes a light surprises - Cow. 83 

— I fain would find in thee - ' - Eos. 244 

— she is a child within my arms - - - Ros. 237 

— thou seem'st not as thyself alone - - Ros. 240 
Somewhat back from the village street Lon. 89 ; Fav. Ill 
Somewhere in India, upon a time - - - Low. 322 
Somnambulist, The ----- Wor. 409 
Sompnoures tale, The ----- Cha. 218 
Son of the carpenter, receive - - - Wes. 83 

— of the distant land ------ Oss. 391 

— of the evening-star, The - Lon. 167 

— of the mighty and the free ! - - - - Hem. 334 

— of the ocean isle ! Hem. 325 

— of the old moon-mountains African ! - - Keats 253 

— of the stranger ! wouldst thou take - - Hem. 135 
-The -------- - Her. 269 

Song— "A spirit haunts." (Tennyson.) - Flo. 471 

— against singing Bro. 74 

— and music ------- Ros. 287 

— and structure ------- G-oe. 364 

— by a person of quality — a burlesque - Pope 388 

— for New- Year's eve * Bry. 234 

— for dinner to Charles Dickens - - - Hoi. 34 

— for Harvard centennial, 1836 - - - Hoi. 32 

— for ragged schools of London - - - Bro. 600 

— for temperance dinner, 1842 - Hoi. 48 

— for the night of Christ's resurrection - Ing. 350 

— for the season. (Eliza Cook. ) Flo. 509 

— "I saw thee on the bridal day " - - Poe 168 



Ai7*y Some 

* ' ° Songs 

Song in Love Triumphant Dry. 559 

— in the Maiden Queen ----- Dry. 550 

— of Fionnuala, The ----- Moore 224 

— of Hiawatha, The ----- Lon. 141 

— of Indian women - - - - - - Whi. 25 

— of Margaret ------- Ing. 356 

— of Marion's men ------ Bry. 134 

— of nature - Erne. 209 

— of O'Euark, The Moore 244 

— of other days, A - - - - - - Hoi. 47 

— of our fathers, The - ----- Hem. 345 

— of Pitcairn's island, A Bry. 85 

— of Saul before last battle - - - Byron 192 

— of slaves in the desert - Whi. 200 

— of seventy. (Tupper.) Fav. 231 

— of Seyd Nimelollah ----- Erne. 249 

— of the battle of Morgarten - Hem. 322 

— of the bell ----- Lon. 23; Sch. 207 

— of the bower ------- Ros. 148 

— of the cavalier. (Motherwell.) - - Poe. 49 

— of the free ------- Whi. 47 

— of the going away Ing. 357 

— of the Greek Amazon Bry. 71 

— of the negro boatman - Whi. 269 

— of the rose - Bro. 180 

— of the shirt, The - Hood 123 

— of the silent land - Lon. 24 

— of the sower, The Bry. 244 

— of the stars, The Bry. 77 

— of the tempest. (Pirate.) - - - - Scott 432 

— "of Twenty-nine" Hoi. 208 

— of war, The ------- Moore 653 

— on Arabian anecdote ----- Hem. 261 

— The chestnuts shine. (T. B. Aldrich.) - Fav. 107 

— throe, The — a sonnet - - - - - Ros. 257 

Songo river Lon. 363 

Songs - Burns 189 

Songs Moore 72, 84, 88, 91, 98, 103, 106, 108, 125, 161, 182, 661 

— are like painted window panes - - - Goe. 235 

— from plays Goe. 390 

— in Albion and Albanius - Dry. 554 

— in many keys Hoi. 87 

— in The Conquest of Granada - - - Dry. 551 

— in The Indian Emperor Dry. 550 

— in King Arthur Dry. 556 

— of labor -------- Whi. 112 

— of many seasons Hoi. 241 

— of Selma, The Oss. 285 

— of seven - Ing. 126; Fav. 375, 378 

— of the affections Hem. 200 



Songs 
Sonnets 



474 



Songs of the Cid 

— of the night watches 

— of the wrens 

— of welcome and farewell 

— on the voices of birds 

— with preludes - 
Sonnet, A ... 
SONNETS: 

A. C. L., To . . . . Low. 19 

— book came forth of late Wor. 230 

— book was writ of late . Mil. 476 

— poet cannot strive for 

despotism . . . Low. 23 

— poet ! he has put his 

heart to school . . Wor. 247 

— sonnet is a moment's 

monument . . . Ros. 226 

— volant tribe of bards . Wor. 233 

— woman's face with na- 

ture's own hand . Sha. 1030 
Aar, Fall of the— Handec Wor. 295 
Abuse of Monastic Power " 3t36 
Accuse me thus : that I have 

scanted all . . Sha. 1042 
Acquittal of the Bishops . Wor. 373 
Acrostic— Sonnet on Emilie 

Marshall . . . Wil. 291 
Address from spirit of 

Cockermouth Castle Wor. 393 
Adequacy .... Bro. 88 
Adieu Rydalian Laurels ! . Wor. 397 
Admonition . . . " 226 
Advance — come forth from 

thy Tyrolean ground " 278 
JEolian Harp, On hearing 

an ... . White 315 
JErial Rock, whose solitary 

brow . . . Wor. 228 
Afflictions of England . " 371 
After-thought ... "333 
Against my love shall be . Sha. 1035 

— that time, if ever that 

time come . . . "1031 
Ah! once again the long- 
left wires among White 221 

— think how one compelled 

for life . . . Wor. 444 

— where is Palafox? . " 280 

— wherefore with infection 

should he live . Sha. 1038 
Ailsa Crag in' an eclipse . Wor. 404 
Aix-la-Chapelle . . "293 
Alack, what poverty my 

Muse brings forth . Sha. 1040 
Alas, 'tis true I have gone 

here and there . " 1041 

— what boots the long la- 

borious guest . . Wor. 278 
Alban Hills, From the . " 314 
Albans. At " 314 
Alexander II., of Russia . Ros. 298 
Alfred the Great . . Wor. 359 
Allegorical Dance of Wo- 
men .... Ros. 154 
Amanda, To . . . Tho. 467 
American Episcopacy . Wor. 375 

— Tradition . ..." 330 



Hem. 


252 


Ing. 


258 


Ten. 


489 


Hoi. 


255 


Ing. 


213 


Ing. 
Gol. 


391 


139 


Spe 


. 637 


. Ing 


. 459 



278 



319 

Wor. 357, 367 
Wor. 227 
Bro. 86 
White 346 
Ros. 258 
Lon. 392 



319 
441 



! Amoretti . 
j Ancient Chess King 
And is it among rude un- 
tutored Danes . . Wor 
I — thou, O River of To-mor- 
row .... Lon, 
j — what melodious sounds Wor 
! Another year! another 

deadly blow . . " 
Anticipation ..." 
Apennines, At a convent in 

the . . . . i " 
Apologies . 
'■ Applethwaite, At 
' Apprehension, An . 
April. To 

Ardor and Memory . 
Artist The .... 
As a decrepit father takes 

delight . . . Sha. 1032 

— an imperfect actor on 

the stage ..." 1031 

— faith thus sanctified . Wor. 364 

— fast as thou shalt wane Sha. 1029 

— indignation mastered 

grief .... Wor. 

— leaves are to the tree . " 

— on a hill-top rude . . Cow. 

— thus oppressed with 

many a heavy care White 

— when with downcast eyes Ten. 
Astarte Syriaca . . . Ros. 
At age of twenty-three . Mil. 
Austen, Dr., To . . . Cow. 
Author's portrait, To the Wor. 
Autumn .... Lon. 

— Idleness . . Ros. 163, 261 
Autumnal Moon, To the . Col. 98 
Avaunt all specious pliancy 

of mind . . . Wor, 
Avon. The " 

Bala-Sala. Isle of Man 
Bangor, Old, Monastery of 
Baptism .... 
Bard of brief days 
Barren Spring . 
Battle of Waterloo . 
Be wise as thou art cruel 
Beaumont, Lady, To . 
Beautiful picture. On a . 
Beauty and the Bird . 

— Genius in ... " 235 
Beauty's Pageant . . " 235 
Before the world had 

passed . . . Wor. 443 
Being your slave what 

should I do . . Sha. 1035 
Beloved in the noisy city Low. 22 

— Vale! I said . . .Wor. 226 



346 

481 



474 



91 



281 



" 


403 


u 


356 


" 


376 


finite 


214 


Ros. 


267 


Wor. 


286 


Sha. 


1045 


Wor. 


237 



Ros. 163 



Mil. 
Ros. 
Wor. 
Ros. 
Wor. 

Bro. 
Wor. 



Ros. 
Wor. 



Ben Nevis .... Keats 

Bereavement . . . Bro. 

Beshrew that heart that 
makes my heart to 
groan . . . Sha. 

Betwixt mine eye and heart 

a league is took . " 

Bible, Translation of the . Wor. 

Birth-bond, The . . Ros. 

Biscayan, Feelings of a 

noble . . . Wor. 

Bishops and Priests . . " 

Bishopstone, Antiquities 

discovered at . . " 

Black Stones of Iona . " 

Blake, William, On . . Ros. 

Blank leaf, On a . Wor. 

Blest Statesman he, whose 
mind's unselfish will 

Blindness, On his 

Body's Beauty . 

Bologna, In . 

Borticelli's " Spring " . 

Bothwell Castle . 

Boyd, Hugh Stuart, On . 

Brave Schill! 

Breadalbane's ruined man- 
sion .... 

Bridal Birth . 

Britons, Struggles of the , 

Brockley Coomb, While 

climbing . . . Col. 

Broken Music . . . Ros. 

— Oar, The .... Lon. 
Brook! whose society the 

Poet seeks . . . Wor. 
Brookfield, Rev. W. H., To Ten. 
Brown, Oliver M., On . Ros. 
Brownie, To Wor. 

Bruges .... 
Buckhurst, Lord of, To 
Burial of the Poet, The 

— place in Scotland 
Burke, Edmund, To . 
Burleigh, Lord, To . 
Burns, On visiting tomb of Keats 

— To 

But be contented, when that 

fell arrest . . Sha. 
But here no cannon . . Wor. 

— were I loved . . . Ten. 

— wherefore do not you a 

mightier . . . Sha. 

By every sweet tradition Hood 

Byron, To . . Keats 250; She. 

Calais, Composed at . . Wor. 

Call not the royal Swede 

unfortunate . " 

Camaldoli, Convent of . " 

Canst thou, O cruel! say I 

love thee not . . Sha. 

Canute Wor. 

Canzone .... Mil. 

Captivity— Mary, Queen of 

Scots . . . Wor. 

Carew, Lady, To . . . Spe. 

Cassandra .... Ros. 

Castle in Wales, Composed 

at a . . . . Wor. 

Castriot, George, On his- 
tory of . . . Spe. 



Spe. 
Lon. 
Wor. 
Col. 
Spe. 



10-14 

1033 
36S 
231 

281 



245 
407' 
295 
229 



480 
205 
440 
294 



720 

300 

387 

292 

27 

401 

383 

93 

25 

254 

255 

1037 

833 

477 

1030 
166 
508 
269 

280 
316 

1046 
360 

472 

239 
28 
160 



"03 



'5 


Songs 


Sonnets 


Casual Incitement . 


Wor. 


356 


Cateclusing . 


" 


376 


Cathedrals 


Wor. 


380 


Cavalcanti to Dante . 


She. 


537 


Cave of Staffa . 


Wor. 


406 


Change me, some god, into 




that breathing rose 


" 


328 


Channel, In the . 


u 


402 


Chapman's Homer, On 




looking into 


Keats 


246 


Charade .... 


Goe. 


221 


Charles the First . 


Wor. 


371 


— the Second . 


u 


372 


Chatsworth ! thy statelj 






mansion . 


" 


246 


Chatterton, Thomas, On 


Ros. 


294 


To . 


Keats 


250 


Chaucer, Geoffrey 


Lon. 


365 


Chichely to Henry V. 


Wor. 


365 


Child of the clouds 


" 


327 


Childbirth, Thanksgiving 






after . 


" 


377 


Chillon, On 


Byron 


82 


Choice, The . 


Ros. 


262 


Christmas-box, The . 


Goe. 


219 


Church Porch, The . 


Ros. 


300 


— to be erected 


Wor. 


379 


Cintra, Convention of 


" 


277 


Cistertian Monastery 


ic 


363 


Civil and Religious Liberty 




373 


Clerical Integrity . 


" 


373 


Clermont, Council of . 


41 


361 


Cloud and Wind 


Ros. 


248 


Clyde, Frith of . 


Wor. 


404 


Cockermouth. In right of 


" 


398 


Coldly we spake . 


" 


360 


Cole, Thomas, To . 


Bry. 


127 


Coleridge, Samuel T., On 


Ros. 


295 


To . 


Hood 


54 


Cologne Cathedral, In 


Wor. 


294 


Comfort .... 


Bro. 


83 


— in the night 


Ing. 


460 


Commination Service, The 


Wor. 


377 


Compensation 


Ing. 


438 


Complacent fictions were 






they .... 


Wor. 


313 


Confirmation . 


" 


377 


Congratulation . 


" 


379 


Conjectures 


" 


354 


Consolation .... 


Bro. 


81 


Consumption . 


Bry. 


54 


— To . 


White 


348 


Contemplation and Work 


Bro. 


86 


Convent in the Apennines 


Wor. 


319 


— of Camaldoli 


" 


316 


Convention of Cintra . 


" 


277 


Conversion 


" 


357 


Coquette, To a 


Ten. 


391 


Cordelia, To . . . 


Wor. 


411 


Corruptions of the higher 
Clergy . 






" 


366 


Could I outwear my present 






state 


Ten. 


471 


Council of Clermont . 


Wor. 


361 


Countess' Pillar 


" 


389 


Covenanters, Persecution 






of the 


" 


373 


Cowper, Henry, To 


Cow. 


454 


Cranmer, Thomas . 


Wor. 


369 


Cromwell, Lord General, To Mil. 


478 


Crusaders . 


Wor. 


361 



Sonnets 



476 



Crusades .... Wor. 361 
Cuckoo, To the . . "244 

Cumberland, Earl of . . Spe. 26 
Cupid laid by his brand and 

fell asleep . . . Sha. 1045 

Curse of Adam, The . Hood 167 

Cyriac, this three years' day Mil. 481 

Dana, Richard H.. To . Lon. 401 
Dance of Women. (Man- 

tegna.) . . . Ros. 154 

Daniel in lion's den . . Wor. 333 

Danish conquests . . " 360 
Dante .... Lon. 91, 393 

— to Cavalcanti . . She. 535 
Dantis Tenebrae . . . Ros. 162 
Danube, Source of the . Wor. 294 
Dark day, A \ . . . Ros. 260 

— Glass, The ... "243 
Day-dream, The ..." 303 

— is gone, The . . . Keats 248 

— of love .... Ros. 234 
Death4n-love ..." 250 
Death's Songsters . " 269 
Deceased Wife, On his . Mil. 482 
Degenerate Douglas ! . . Wor. 259 
D'Enghoen. Disinterment 

of Duke ..." 286 

Departure .... Goe. 216 

Deplorable his lot who tills 

the ground . . Wor. 333 

Derwent. River, To the . " 393 

Descendants of Alfred . " 319 

Descent of the Muses, The Lon. 331 

Desire we past illusions to 

recall? . . . Wor. 402 

Despond who will— I heard 

a voice exclaim . " 404 

Desponding Father! mark 

this altered bough " 238 

Devouring Time, blunt thou Sha. 1030 

Did pangs of grief for le- 
nient . . . Wor. 403 

Diodati, Charles, To . . Cow. 59? 

— ete'ldiro ... Mil. 473 
Discontent .... Bro. 87 
Discovery made too late Col. 92 
Dissensions .... Wor. 356 
Dissolution of the Monas- 
teries . . . . " 366 

Distractions . . . " S"0 

Dogmatic Teachers . " 240 

Donna leggiadra . . Mil. 471 

Donnerdate, Plain of . . Wor. 331 

Doubters and Lovers . Goe. 220 

Douglas Bay, On entering Wor. 402 
Dover, At . . . Wor. 271, 306 

— Valley of . . . . Wor. 305 
Down a swift stream . " 374 
Dream. On a . . Keats 247 
Druidical Excommunica- 
tion .... Wor. 355 

Druids, Trepidation of the " 354 
Dudevant, Madame, To . Bro. 88 
Dunolly Castle, On revisit- 
ing ... Wor. 404 

— Eagle, The ... "404 
Dyer, John, To . . . " 229 
E. B., To Lady ... "243 

Eagles "385 

Early Morning. (Miss A. 

E. Starr.) . . Flo. 407 



Echo upon the Gemmi . Wor. 
Eden, River, Cumberland " 
Edward the Sixth . " 

Ejaculation . . . " 
Elgin Marbles, To the Keats 

Eliot's Oak . . . Lon. 
Elizabeth, Queen . . Wor. 
Emigrant French Clergy " 
Emperors and Kings how 

oft have temples rung " 
Enamored, artless, young . Cow. 
England ! the time is come Wor. 
English reformers in exile " 
Enigma, An . . . Poe 
Enthusiast, To an . . Hood 
Episcopacy in America . Wor. 
Epochs, The .... Goe. 
Equal troth . . . Ros. 
Ere yet our course was 

graced . . . Wor. 
Eremite Convent of Camal- 

doli . 
Erskine, To . . . . Col. 
Essex, Earl of, To . . Spe. 
Even so for me a vision . Wor. 
Evening Rainbow. (South- 

ey.) .... Flo. 

— Stay, The . . . Lon. 
Event in Ancient History, 

On an . . . Wor. 

Exaggeration . . . Bro. 

Failure .... Ing. 

Fair Lady ! whose harmo- 
nious name . . Cow. 

— prime of lif e ! . . Wor. 
Fairfax, Lord General, To Mil. 
Fairy chasm. The . . Wor. 
Fall of the Aar— Handec . " 
Fallen, and diffused into a 

shapeless heap . " 
False poets and true . Hood 
Fame tells of groves . Wor. 
Fancy Ing. 

— and tradition . . Wor. 

— To . . . . Hood 
Far yond this narrow para- 
pet .... Low. 

Farewell to the glen Ros. 164; 

— thou art too dear for 

my possessing . Sha. 

Fast— March, 1832 . . Wor. 

February Fourteenth, For Hood 

Feel for the wrongs to uni- 
versal ken . . Wor. 

Feelings of a French Roy- 
alist . ..." 

Festivals have I seen that 

were not names . " 

Field of Waterloo, After 

visiting . . " 

Fiammetta . . . Ros. 

Filial piety .... Wor. 

Finite and Infinite . . Bro. 

Fire Lon. 

Fish-women— on landing at 

Calais .... Wor. 

Fit retribution by the mor- 
al code ..." 

Five English poets, On Ros. 

Florence, At ... Wor. 

Flowers . . . . " 



408 
368 
381 
251 
381 
370 
379 



598 
273 
370 
79 
165 
375 
220 
242 

328 

317 
95 
26 

232 

435 
91 

276 

88 
508 

596 
234 
478 
329 
295 

332 
182 
242 
437 
389 
164 

23 
263 

1033 
438 
183 

441 



270 



246 
90 



44b 
294 
318 



4:17 



Sonnets 



Flowers on the top of Pil- 
lars .... Wor. 

Flush or Faunus . . Bro. 

Fly, some kind harbinger . Wor. 

Food in travel . . . Goe. 

For action born, existing to 

be tried . . . Wor. 

— shame ! deny that thou 

bear'st love . . Sha. 

— this true nobleness . Low. 
Forgiveness . . . Whi. 
Forms of prayer at sea . Wor. 
Found .... Eos. 
Four fiery steeds impatient 

of the rein . . Wor. 

— Princesses at Wilna . Lon. 
France, Negroes expelled 

from .... Wor. 
French and Spanish Guer- 
rillas . . . . " 

— army in Russia . . " 
Revolution, On histories of 
Friend, To a . Col. 99; 
Friendly meeting, The 
Friend's marriage, On a 
Frith of Clyde, On the 
From dawn to noon 

— fairest creatures we de- 

sire increase . 

— false assumption rose. 

— the dark chambers of 

dejection freed . " 

— this deep chasm . " 

— you have I been absent 

in the spring . . Sha. 

Full many a glorious morn- 
ing . . 

Funeral service 

Furness Abbey, At 

Futurity .... 

Galaxy, The . 

Garcilasso, From . 

Genevieve . 

Genevra, To 

Genius in Beauty 

George III., On Death of 

Germans on Heights of 
Hockheim 

Giddings, Joshua R., To. . 

Giorgione— a Venetian pas- 
toral .... Ros. 

Giovane poano . . . Mil. 

Give me a cottage . White 

Glad Tidings . . .Wor. 

Glen of Loch Etive, Com- 
posed in ..." 

Go back to antique ages, of 

thine eyes . . . " 

Gordale . . . . " 

Gracious moonlight . . Ros. 

Grasmere Lake, Composed 

near .... Wor. 

Grasshopper and Cricket. 

(Anon.) . . . Flo. 

Grave of a friend, At the White 

Gravestone at Worcester 

Cathedral . . Wor. 

Great men have been 

among us . . " 

— truths are portions . Low. 
Greece, Liberty of . . Wor. 



Goe. 
Wor. 



Ros. 



Sha. 
Wor. 



Wor. 

Bro. 

. Lon. 
Flo. 
. Col. 
Byron 
. Ros. 
Wor. 



Low, 



406 

89 

261 

216 

315 

1029 
20 
121 
378 
301 



271 



283 
439 
399 
214 
231 
404 



1028 



234 
330 

1040 

1032 
378 
251 
84 
366 
145 
34 
254 
235 
242 

284 
25 

153 
473 
312 
357 



277 
240 



277 

375 
345 

245 

272 
20 
276 



Greenock, Scotland . 


Wor. 


407 


Gretna, what tearful list- 






ening! 


" 


398 


Grief, thou hast lost an ever 






ready friend 


" 


230 


Grey, Lord, of Wilton, To 


Spe. 


27 


Growth ..... 


Goe. 


215 


Guerrillas, French and 






Spanish . 


Wor. 


282 


Guernica, Oak of 


" 


281 


Gunpowder plot 


" 


371 


Hail! gifted youth . White 


209 


— Zaragoza ! . . . 


Wor. 


279 


Hambleton Hills, journey 






across 


" 


235 


Hand, beautiful . 


Ros. 


305 


Hard task ! . . . 


Wor. 


440 


Hark ! 'tis some sprite . 


White 


210 


— 'tis the thrush 


Wor. 


248 


Hart's-horn tree, near Pen- 






rith .... 


n 


389 


Harvest-moon, The 


Lon. 


382 


Harvey, M. Gabriel, To 


Spe. 


702 


Hatton, Sir Christopher, 

To ... . 

Haydon,B.R.,To, Keats 252 


u 


25 
234 


, Wor. 


Haydon's portrait of Na- 






poleon . 


" 


247 


— portrait of Wellington . 


" 


247 


Hay ley, Wm., To . 


Cow. 


491 


He and I 


Ros. 


275 


Heart of the night . 


" 


259 


Heart's compass 


" 


240 


— haven .... 


a 


237 


— hope 


" 


229 


Heaven and earth . 


Bro. 


92 


Henry ! I greet thine en- 






trance 


White 


209 


Her gifts .... 
— only pilot the soft breeze 


Ros. 


242 


Wor. 


227 


Here pause : the poet claims 




at least this praise 


" 


282 


Heroe's lamp . 


Ros. 


270 


Highland broach, The 
— hut .... 


Wor. 


386 


" 


386 


Hill summit, The 


Ros. 


261 


Hints for the fancy 


Wor. 


329 


Hoarded joy 


Ros. 


267 


Hockheim, Germans on 






heights of . 


Wor. 


284 


Hofer, Andreas 


" 


278 


Holidays .... 


Lon. 


384 


Holy and heavenly spir- 






its .... 


Wor. 


370 


Homeward we turn 


" 


407 


Holy Family, The," For 


Ros. 


293 


Honor .... 


Wor. 


279 


Hope overtaken . 


Ros. 


247 


How can I then return . 


Sha. 


1C31 


— can my muse want sub- 






ject to invent . 


" 


1032 


— careful was I Avhen I took 




my way . 


" 


1034 


— clear, how keen, how 






marvelously bright 


Wor. 


236 


— heavy do I journey on 






the way . 


Sha. 


1034 


— like a winter hath my 






absence been . 


" 


1039 


— oft, when thou, my music " 


1043 


— shall I paint thee? 


Wor. 


3.7 



Sonnets 



478 



How soon— alas ! did man "Wor. 

— svreet and lovely dost 

thou make . . . Sha. 

— sweet it is when mother 

fancy rocks . . Wor. 
Howard, Lord Charles, To Spe. 

— Mrs.. Monument of Wor. 
Hugo, Victor, To . . Ten. 



362 

1039 

234 
27 

408 
721 



Human Seasons. The. (Keats.) Flo. 280 
Hunsdon, Lord. Sonnet to Spe. 27 
Hunt, Leigh, To . Keats 229 

I am not one who much or 

oft delight . . . Wor. 418 

— ask not for those thoughts Low. 20 

— cannot think that thou 

shouldst . . . " 21 

— did but prompt the age Mil. 476 

— dropped my pen . . Wor. 277 

— grant thou wert not 

married to my muse Sha. 1038 

— grieve not that rope 

knowledge . . . Low. 25 

— grieved for Bonaparte . Wor. 270 

— heard (alas! 'twas only 

in a dream) . . " 235 

— never saw that you did 

painting need . . Sha. 1038 

— saw the figure of a lovely 

maid . . . .Wor. 372 

— stand again on the famil- 

iar shore . . . Lon. 364 

— thought our love at full Low. 25 

— watch, and long have 

watched . . . Wor. 231 

— will not rob the rose Byron 245 

— would not have this per- 

fect love . . . Low. 20 
If mv dear love were but 

" the child of state . Sha. 1043 

— the dull substance of my 

flesh were . . . " 1033 

— there be nothing new " 1035 

Fav. 18 

— these brief records . Wor. 241 

— thou survive my well- 

contented day . Sha. 1032 

— thy soul check thee that 

I come so near . " 1044 
n Ponte Vecchio di Firenze Lon. 308 
Illustration . . . Wor. 371 
Imaginative regrets . . " 367 
In a word .... Goe. 214 

— absence . . . Low. 24 

— Attica thy birthplace . Lon. 364 

— due observance of an an- 

cient rite . . . Wor. 280 

— faith, I do not love thee 

with mine eyes . . Sha. 1045 

— loving thee thou know'st 

I am forsworn . . " 1046 

— my mind's eyes a temple Wor. 250 

— the old age black was 

not counted fair . Sha. 1043 
Inclusiveness . . . Ros. 259 
Indignation of a Spaniard Wor. 281 

Infant M M . . " 244 

Influence abused . . " 360 
Ingle wood forest, In . . " 383 
Ingres— " Ruggiero and 

Angelica" . . Ros. 154 
Inland, within a hollow vale Wor. 271 



Insufficiency . . . Bro. 
Intent on gathering wool 

from hedge . . Wor. 
Interdict, An . . " 

I Intrepid sons of Albion ! " 

I Introductory to Ecclesias- 
tical sonnets . . " 
i Invasion of Poland, On the Ten. 

Iona Wor. 

Irreparableness . . . Bro. 
Is death, when evil against 

good .... Wor. 

— it for fear to wet a wid- 

ow's eye . . . Sha. 

— it thy will thy image 

should keep' open . " 

— there a power that can 

sustain? . . . Wor. 
Isle of Man . . . " 

— of Man, At sea off the . " 
It is a beauteous evening " 

— is not death . . . Hood 

— is not to be thought of 

that the flood . Wor. 

Italian, From an . . Rog. 
Italy, After leaving . . Wor. 
Joan of Kent, Execution of ' ; 
Johnson, John. To . . Cow. 
Jones! as from Calais 

southward you and I Wor. 

— "Wine of Circe" . Ros. 
Journey homeward, On a . Col. 

— renewed . . . Wor. 
Jung-frau, The . . . " 
Keats, John . Lon. 366; Ros. 

To the spirit of . . Low. 

Keen fitful gusts are whis- 
pering. (Keats.) . Flo. 

Kendal and Windermere 

railway, On the . Wor. 
Kent, To the men of . " 
Kill iecra aide Pass, In the . " 
King Lear, Before re-read- 



Wor. 



but 



Ros. 



Spe. 



King's College Chapel 
Kirk of Ulpha, The . 
Kiss, The . 
Known in vain . 
La Bella Mano . 
Ladies in the court. To 
Lady! it cannot be 

thine eyes . . Cow. 
— thou weepest . . White 
Lafayette, Marquis de, To Col. 
Lake' Leman, To . Byron 
Lamp's Shrine, The . Ros. 
Lancaster Castle, In view of Wor. 



Landmark, The 

Last fire ... 

— of Keats 

— three from Trafalgar . 
Late Spring. (Southey.) 
Latimer and Ridley . 
Latitudinarianism . 
Laud, Archbishop 
Lawes, H., To . 
Laurence. Mr.. To . 
Leander, On a picture of 

Lear 

Ledbury, St. Catherine of 
Leggett's Monument 



Ros. 

Keats 
Ros. 
Flo. 

Wor. 



Mil. 

Keats 
Hood 
Wor. 

Whi. 



354 

481 
407 
82 

442 



1035 



403 
402 
232 
165 

272 
330 
319 

363 



155 



371 
296 
20 

279 

251 
274 
260 

2?3 

330 
&33 
229 
259 
305 



312 
96 
264 
244 
442 
260 
241 
249 
297 
449 
369 
372 
371 
477 
480 
247 
181 



479 



Sonnets 



Let me confess that we two 




must be twain . Sha. 1032 


— me not to the marriage 




of true minds . . " 


1042 


— not my love be called 




idolatry . . . " 


1040 


— those who are in favor 




with then* stars . " 


1031 


Ley, Margaret, To . . Mil. 


475 


Life . . . . . Bro. 


91 


— in love .... Ros. 


244 


— the beloved . . . " 


272 


Lift not the painted veil . She. 


411 


Like as the waves make 




toward Sha. 1035; Fav. 


18 


— as, to make our appetites 




more keen . . . Sha. 


1042 


Lilith . . . . . Ros. 


158 


Liturgy, The . . . Wor. 


375 


Lo ! as a careful housewife 




runs to catch . . Sha. 


1045 


— in the orient when the 




gracious light . . " 


1029 


— o'er the welkin the tem- 




pestuous clouds White 


313 


— where she stands fixed Wor. 


248 


Lofft, unto thee . . White 


344 


Lombardy, In . . . Wor. 


319 


London, Written in . . " 


272 


Long Meg and her daughters " 


409 


— favored England ! . . " 


439 


Lonsdale, Earl of, To . 


409 


Look in thy glass, and tell 




the face . . Sha. 


1028 


— now on that adventurer Wor. 


280 


- The .... Bro. 


85 


Looking down . . . Ing. 
Lord of my love, to whom 


438 




in vassalage . . Sha. 


1031 


Lost days .... Ros. 


269 


— on both sides . . . " 


271 


L'Ouverture, Toussaint, To Wor. 


271 


Love . . . Bro. 92; Ing. 


466 


— and hope . . . Ros. 


248 


— dearest lady . . . Hood 


168 


— enthroned . . . Ros. 


227 


— is my sin and thy dear 




virtue hate . . Sha. 


1045 


— is too young to know 




what conscience is " 


1046 


— letter, The . . . Ros. 


232 


— moon, The ..." 


245 


— sweetness . . . " 


237 


Lover's walk, The . . " 


232 


Love's baubles . . " 


238 


-fatality. ..." 


253 


— last gift ..-.." 


255 


— lovers .... " 


230 


— testament. . . " 


228 


Lovesight . . . . " 


228 


Loving one once more . Goe. 


217 


— one writes . . . " 


217 


Lowther! in thy majestic 




pile .... Wor. 


409 


— Lady Mary, To . . " 


236 


Luke, Saint, the painter Ros. 


157 


M. 0. S., To . . . . Low. 


23 


M. W., To, on her birthday " 


21 


Macreadv, Wm. Oh. rles, To Ten. 


485 


Maiden Spenks. The . Goe. 


215 


Malhain Cove . . . Wor. 


240 



Manse in Scotland . . Wor. 384 

Mantegna's dance of women Ros. 154 
Mark the concentrated 

hazels that enclose . Wor. 235 

Marriage ceremony, The . Wor. 377 

Mary Magdalene . . Ros. 157 

Mary, Queen of Scots . Wor. 399 

— Queen of Scots— cap- 

tivity ... . " 239 
Mary's girlhood . . Ros. 156 
Massacre in Piemont . . Mil. 479 
Master so early of the va- 
rious lyre . . White 211 
Match with the moon . Ros. 163 
May morning, Composed 

on a . . . . Wor. 247 
Meaning of the look . . Bro. 85 
Memorial thresholds . Ros. 266 
Men of the western world . Wor. 440 
Mercy, To . . . . Col. 94 
Methinks that to some va- 
cant hermitage . Wor. 358 

— 'twere no unprecedented 

feat .... " 332 
Methought I saw the foot- 
steps of a throne . " 233 
Michelangelo, From . Eme. 214 
Lon.392; Wor. 231, 318 
Michelangelo's " Holy Fam- 
ily". . . . Ros. 293 

kiss . " 273 

Mid-rapture ..." 239 

Midsummer .... Bry. 107 

Milton, John . . . Lon. 365 

— thou should'st be living 

at this hour . . Wor. 272 
Mine be the strength of 

spirit . . . Ten. 476 

— ear has rung . . . Wor. 380 

— eye and heart are at a 

mortal war . . Sha. 1033 

— eye hath played the 

painter ..." 1031 

Misfortune, To . . White 315 

Missions and travels . . Wor. 339 

Monasteries, Dissolution of " 366 

Monastery of old Bangor " 356 

Monastic power, Abuse of " 366 

— voluptuousness . . " 366 
Monks and schoolmen . " 363 
Monochord, The . Ros. 164, 265 
Montenegro . . . Ten. 721 
Moods .... Lon. 384 
Moon, On the Wor. 238 

— To the . . White 311; " 238 
Moonstar, The . . . Ros. 241 
Morrow's message, The . " 245 
Moscow, Burning of . . Wor. 283 
Most sweet it is with up- 
lifted eyes . . . " 411 

Mother, To his Her. 307; White 378 

— To my .... Poe 77 
Mountaineer and poet . Bro. 91 
Mutability .... Wor. 378 
Mutation .... Bry. 70 
Music to hear, why hear'st 

thou music sadly? Sha. 1029 

My cathedral . '. . Lon. 400 

— glass shall not persuade Sha. 1030 

— heai't has thanked thee, 

Bowles! . . . Col. 91 



Sonnets 



480 



Goe. 
Wor. 

Ros. 

Wor. 
Lon 
Mil. 
Ros. 



182 



1046 
1040 



1044 
103S 



247 
330 
314 

271 
218 
3S0 
379 
275 

438 
401 
471 
297 



My heart is sick with long- 
ing .... Hood 

— hope and heart is with 

thee .... Ten. 

— love, I have no fear . Low. 

— love is as a fever, longing 

stUl . . . . Sha. 

— love is strengthened, tho' 

more weak . . " 

— mistress* eyes are noth- 

ing like the sun . " 

— tongue-tied Muse in man- 

ners .... " 
Nameless Grave, A . . Lon. 
Namur and Liege, Between Wor. 
Napoleon, On portrait of . " 
Nature .... Lon. 
Near Anio's stream I spied Wor. 
Negroes expelled from 

France 
Nemesis .... 
New Church-yard 

— Churches 
Newborn death . 
Newspaper, After read 

ing a . 

Night 

Nightingale, To the 
Nile. Tiber and Thames 

— To the . . Keats 253; She. 406 
No longer mourn for me 

when I am dead . Sha. 1036 

— more be grieved at that 

which thou hast done " 

— mortal object did these 

eyes behold . . Wor. 

— Time, thou shalt not 

boast that I do change Sha. 
Norman Conquest, The . Wor. 
Norris, Sir Jonn. To . Spe. 
Northleigh, To . . . Dry. 
Northumberland, Earl of ,To Spe. 
Not envying Latian shades Wor. 

— from the stars do I my 

judgment pluck . Sha. 1030 

— hurled precipitous from 

steep to steep . . Wor. 

— Love, not War, nor the 

tumultuous swell " 

— marble, nor the gilded 

monuments . . Sha. 

— mine own fears, nor the 

prophetic soul . . " 

— so that pair whose 

youthful spirits . Wor. 

— to the object specially de- 

signed . . . " 
November .... Bry. 
Now that all hearts are glad Wor. 
Nunuery . . . " 

Nuns fret not at their 'con- 
vent's narrow room . " 
Nun's Well, Brigham . " 

O Beauty, passing beauty ! Ten, 

— call not me to justify the 

wrong . . . Sha. 

— for my sake do you with 

Fortune chide . . " 

— from what power hast 

thou this powerful 

might ...*'." 1016 



1032 

231 

1043 
360 

28 
267 

26 
327 



333 

235 



1034 
1041 



443 

70 

284 

408 

226 



1044 



1041 



O how faint when I of you 

do write . . . Sha. 

— how much more doth 

beauty . . " 

— how thy worth with man- 

ners . . . * " 

— lest the world should task 

you to recite . . " 

— me, what eyes hath Love 

put in my head . . " 

— mountain stream ! . Wor. 

— never say that I was false 

of heart . . . Sha. 

— River of Yesterday . Lon. 

— that you were yourself . Sha. 

— thou, my lovely boy . " 

— Thou! whose face. Keats 

— truant Muse, what shall 

be thy amends . . Sha. 

Oh what a wreck ! . . Wor. 

Oak of Guernica . . " 

Obligations of Civil to Re- 
ligious Liberty . . " 

Ocean, To the . . . Hood 

October. (Bryant.) . . Flo. 

O'er the wide earth, on 

mountain . . . Wor. 

O'erweening statesmen 

have full long relied " 

Oker Hill, Tradition of . 

Old Abbeys . " 

— Age .... Lon. 

— and New Art . . . Ros. 

— Bridge at Florence . Lon. 
On reading Wordsworth's 

sonnets . . . Low. 

— tolona! . . . .Wor. 
Once hardly in a cycle . Low. 
One Hope, The . . . Ros. 

— might believe that nat- 

ural miseries . . Wor. 
Open Prospect . . . " 
Or I shall live your epitaph 

to make . . . Sha. 

— whether doth my mind 

being crowned with 
you .... " 

Or moil d and Ossory, Earl - 

of. To Spe. 

Other benefits . . . Wor. 

— influences ..." 
Our bodily life, some plead " 

— Lady of the Rocks . Ros. 

— love is not a fading 

earthly flower . Low. 
Oxenford, Earl of, To . Spe. 
Oxford University, To . Wor. 
Ozymandias .... She. 
Pain in Pleasure . . Bro. 
Painter, To a . . . Wor. 
Palafox? Ah. where is . " 
Pale roamer through the 

night .... Col. 
Pandora . ' . . . Ros. 
Papal abuses . . . Wor. 

— dominion . . . " 
Parker Cleaveland . . Lon. 
Parsonage in Oxfordshire Wor. 
Parted Love . . . Ros. 
Pass of Killiecrankie . Wor. 
Passion and Worship . . Ros. 



1037 
1034 



1036 
1046 



1041 

333 

1029 

1043 

252 

1040 
249 
281 

373 
180 
501 

279 



246 

379 



22 
406 

22 
276 

273 
329 

1038 
1042 



358 
443 
153 

24 

26 
241 
406 



161 



242 
249 

260 







4 


81 


Sonnets 


Passover in the Holy Fami 


Iv Ros. 


156 


Reproof 


. Wor. 


359 


Past and Future . 


. Bro. 


82 


Rest and be thankful " . 


" 


386 


Pastoral Character . 


Wor. 


375 


Resting-place, The 


" 


332 


Patriotic Sympathies . 




372 


Retired Mariner, By a . 


" 


403 


Paulinus .... 


" 


357 


Retirement . 


" 


235 


Pelion and Ossa flourish 


L 




Retro, me, Sathana! " . 


Ros. 


271 


side hy side . 


(C 


227 


Return .... 


. Wor. 


830 


Pembroke, Countess of, To Spe. 


28 


— content! 


' ; 


332 


Pensive at eve . 


Col. 


99 


Revival of Popery 


" 


368 


Pennsylvanians, To the 


. Wor. 


440 


Rhine, On banks of the . 


" 


294 


Per certo i bei vosfr occhi 


Mil. 


473 


Rhone. To the River . 


. Lon. 


332 


Perplexed Music . 


. Bro. 


84 


Richard the First 


Wor. 


361 


Persecution 


Wor. 


355 


Riddel, Robert, Death of 


Burns 


143 


— of the Covenanters 


" 


373 


Ridley, La timer and 


Wor. 


369 


Persuasion 


" 


357 


River, that stealest with 






Fhhlips, Wendell 


. Low. 


24 


such silent pace 


Lon. 


364 


Pietv, Decav of 


Wor. 


230 


— Otter, To the . 


Col. 


92 


Pilgrim Fathers, The . 


" 


374 


Roman Antiquities . 


Wor. 


339 


Pine of Monte Mario at 




— antiquities at Bishopstone " 


245 


Rome 


" 


312 


— Consul doomed his sons. 




Piteous sobs that choke 






The . 


" 


442 


The . 


. Col. 


99 


— Refinements, Temptations 




Place de la Bastille, Paris 


Ros. 


301 


from . 


" 


355 


Places of worship 


.Wor. 


375 


Rome, At . 


" 


313 


Plain of Donnerdale 


" 


331 


Romney, George, To . 


Cow. 


492 


Plea for Authors . 




249 


Ronsard. From— a fragment Keats 256 


— for the Historian 


" 


313 


Roses, Wars of the 


Wor. 


365 


Poet, The 


. Bro. 


91 


Roslin Chapel, Composed in " 


384 


Poets, The 


Lon. 


381 


Ruggiera and Angelica " 






Point at Issue, The 


Wor. 


368 


(Ingres.) . 


Ros. 


154 


Polish Insurrection, On the Ten. 


481 


Rural Ceremony 


Wor. 


378 


Political greatness 


. She, 


43J 


Russia, French army in 


" 


283 


Poor soul, the center of my 






Rydal, Composed at . 


tt 


319 


sinful earth . 


Sha. 


1045 


— In the woods of . 


" 


243 


Portrait of Henry VHI. 


Wor. 


242 


S. H., To 


" 


230 


— The e 


Ros. 


231 


Sacheverel 


" 


374 


Powers' Greek Slave . 


Bro. 


91 


Sacrament . 


" 


377 


Praised by the Rivers 


Wor. 


365 


Said Secrecy to Cowardice 




439 


Prefatory to " Nineteenth 






St. Botolph*s Town ! . 


Lon. 


383 


Centurv " 


Ten. 


720 


— Catherine of Ledbury 


Wor. 


239 


Pride of Youth . 


Ros. 


233 


— John's, Cambridge 


Lon. 


384 


Priestley, Joseph. To 


Col. 


94 


— Peter "s, In sight of 


Wor. 


314 


Primitive Saxon Clergy . 


Wor. 


358 


Saints .... 


" 


367 


Prisoner, The . 


Bro. 


89 


Sand, George, To . 


Bro. 


88 


Promising .... 


Ing. 


465 


Saragossa! . 


Wor. 


279 


Prophecy, A 


Wor. 


27(5 


Saxon Conquest 


" 


356 


Proserpina . 


Ros. 


304 


— Monasteries . 


" 


359 


Prospect, The . 


Bro. 


92 


Say that thou didst forsake 






Prosperity counts cour- 






me for some fault 


Sha. 


1039 


tiers .... 


Byron 


250 


— what is honor? . 


Wor. 


279 


Proud were ye. mountains 


Wor. 


251 


Scanderbeg, King of the 






Pure element of waters . 


" 


240 


Epirots, On . 


Spe. 
Wor. 


703 


Q . To Rotha . 


" 


245 


Scene in Tenice . 


362 


Qual in colle aspro . 


Mil. 


472 


Schaffhausen. Fall of 


" 


371 


Quick o"er the wintry waste White 379 


Sehil'er JohnC. F. Von, To 


Col. 


97 


Raisley Calvert, To mem- 






Schwytz, Town of . 


Wor. 


297 


ory of 


Wor. 


233 


Science. To . 


Poe 


130 


Raleigh, Sir Walter, To . 


Spe. 
Wor. 


28 


Scorn not the Sonnet 


Wor. 


2.°3 


Ranz des Vaches " . 


297 


Scotfs departure for Naples " 


383 


Raphael's picture of the 






Sea-spell, A 


Ros. 


302 


Baptist . 


" 


318 


— shore. Isle of Man . 


Wor. 


402 


Recantatory 


White 


315 


Seaside. Composed at the 
Seathwaite Chapel 


" 


269 


Receiving a gift, On 


Hood 


166 


" 


330 


Recovery .... 


Wor. 


355 


Seclusion .... 


" 


358 


Reflections 


" 


368 


Secret parting 


Ros. 


249 


Reformation, The 


" 


369 


See the condemned alone 






Reformers, Eminent 


" 


370 


within his cell . 


Wor. 


444 


Refusal of Aid between Na- 






Semedo, Portuguese of . 


Bry. 


151 


tions 


Ros. 


161 


Seraph and Poet . 


Bro. 


81 


Regrets 


Wor. 


378 


Severed selves . 


Ros. 


246 


— at Rome 
31 




313 


Shadow, A . 


Lon. 


367 



Sonnets 



482 



134 



Shakespeare . . . Lon. 

— In a volume of . . Hood 
Shakespearean readings of 

Mrs. Kemble . . Lon. 
Shall I compare thee to a 

summer's day? . Sha. 1030 

— the hag Evil die with 

child of Good 
She cannot end . 
Sheep-washing . 
Shelley, Percy B., On 
Sheridan, Richard B., To 
Sibylla Palmif era 
Siddons, Mrs., To . 
Silence . . Hood 167: 
Silent Noon . 
Simplicity, To 
Sin of seif-love possesseth 

all mine eye . . Sha. 1035 
Since brass, nor stone, nor 

earth . Sha. 1035; Fav. 19 
I left you, mine eye is in 



Ten. 


471 


Goe. 


21 S 


Wor. 


331 


Ros. 


29o 


Col. 


05 


Ros. 


158 


Col. 


'Hi 


Poe 


88 


Ros. 


233 


Col. 


100 



my mind . . . Sha. 
Sinner, The . . . Her. 


1011 


119 


Skinner, Cyriac, To . . Mil. 


481 


Sky-prospect from Plain of 




France . . . Wor. 


305 


Slave Trade, Abolition of 


276 


Sleep Lon. 


337 


,-To Wor. 


228 


Sleeping Child, To a . . Hood 


183 


Sleepless Dreams . . Ros. 


246 


Snow-drop, To a . . . Wor. 


233 


So am I as the rich, whose 




blessed key . . Sha. 


1034 


— are you to my thoughts 




as food to life . . " 


1C37 


— is it not with me as with 




that Muse . . . " 


1030 


— now I have confessed that 




he is thine ..." 


1044 


— oft have I invoked thee 




for my Muse . " 


1037 


— shall I live, supposing 




thou art true . " 


1039 


Sobieski, John,— Siege of 




Vienna . . . Wor. 


286 


Sole listener. Duddon ! . " 


328 


Some glory in their birth . Sha. 


1039 


— say thy fault is youth " 


1039 


Song-throe, The . . Ros. 


257 


Sonnet, To a . . . Hood 


181 


Sonnets for pictures Ros. 153 


293 


Soon did the Almighty 




Giver .... Wor. 


448 


Soul-light . . . Ros. 


240 


Soul's Beauty . . . Ros. 


264 


— Expression . . . Bro. 


81 


— Sphere. The . . . Ros. 


257 


Sound of Mull, In the . Wor. 


385 


— of the sea, The . . Lon. 


366 


Source of the Danube . Wor. 


294 


Spaniard. Indignation of a " 


281 




282 


Spenser. To . . . Keats 


249 


Spirit of solitude, The . Byron 


254 


Sponsors .... Wor. 


376 


Spring .... Ros. 


299 


— Botticelli . " 


294 


Staffa. Cave of . . . Wor. 


405 


Stanhope, Earl, To . . Col. 


97 



Staub-bach, On approach- 
ing the . . . Wor. 

Steamboats, Viaducts, Rail- 
ways " 

Stepping-stones, The . " 

Still-born Love . . . Ros. 

Storm, During a . . Wor. 

— had been on the hills . Wil. 

Stranded near Harbor of 



Wor. 
Low. 
Wor. 
Low. 

Bro. 
Wor. 

Lon. 

Ros. 

Wor. 



295 
409 



287 
305 



356 
22 
83 
245 
366 
272 
274 
231 



Boulogne 
Street, The 

Struggle of the Britons 
Sub Pondere Crescit 
Substitution . 
Such age how beautiful 
Summer day by the sea 
Sun's Shame. The . 
Superscription, A 
■Supreme Being, To the 

— surrender .... Ros. 230 
Surprised by joy— impa- 
tient as the wind . Wor. 

Sweden. King of . " 

Sweet is the Rose. (Spen- 
ser.) .... Flo. 

— love, renew thy force . Sha. 

— Mercy ! . . . . Col. 

— to the gay of heart . White 
Switzerland. Subjugation of Wor. 
Take all my loves, my love Sha. 

— cradled Nursling of the 

mountain . . . Wor. 

Tapir, To a . . . White 

Tarrytown, In churchyard 

at . . Lon. 

Tears Bro. 

Tell, William . . . Bry. 

Temptations from Roman 

refinements . . Wor. 

Tenderly do we feel by na- 
ture's law . . " 

Tennyson, To. (Wapen- 
take.) . . . Lon. 

Thanksgiving after child- 
birth . . . Wor. 

That god forbid that made 
me first your slave 

— time of year that mayst 

in me behold . . " 

— thou art blamed shall not 

be thy defect . . " 

— thou hast her, it is not all ' ' 

— you were once unkind, 

befriend me now . " 
The doors are all wide open Lon. 

— expense of spirit in a 

waste of shame . Sha. 1043 

— fairest, brightest hues Wor. 227 

— formal world relaxes 

her cold chain . . " 

— forward violet thus did 1 

chide . Sha. 1040; Flo. 

— little love-god lying once 

asleep . . . Sha. 

— love of all things springs Low. 

— martial courage of a day 

is vain . . . . Wor. 

— most alluring clouds that 

mount . . . . " 

— other two, slight air and 

purging fire . . Sha. 



232 
270 

520 
1035 
93 
378 
271 
1033 

327 
347 

380 
83 
118 

355 

442 



Sha. 1035 
1037 



1042 
365 



444 
384 



1046 
22 



279 



247 



1033 



483 



Sonnets 



The palled thunder-stricken 




sigh .... Ten. 


272 


— pibroch's note discoun- 




tenanced . . . Wor. 


384 


— power of armies is a vis- 




ible thing . . . " 


282 


— shepherd looking east- 




ward " 


237 


— stars are mansions built 




by nature's hand . " 


238 


— stream whose plaintive 




course . . . Byron 


254 


— world is too much with 




us .... Wor. 


233 


Then hate me when thou 




wilt .... Sha. 


1039 


— let not winter's ragged 




hand deface . . " 


1029 


There is a bondage worse Wor. 


273 


— is a little unpretending 




rill .... 


227 


— is a pleasure in poetic 




pains . . . " 


237 


— never yet was flower fan* 




in vain . . . Low. 


21 


There," said a stripling . Wor. 


407 


Therefore think not the 




past is wise alone . Low. 


23 


These times strike moneyed 




worldlings . . . Wor. 


273 


They call thee Merry Eng- 




land " 


397 


— dreamt not of a perisha- 




ble home . . . " 


381 


— that have power to hurt 

and will do none . Sha. 




1039 


— who have seen the noble 




Roman's scorn . . Wor. 


313 


— eyes I love, and they, as 




pitying me . . . Sha. 


1044 


Thomson, Catherine, In 




memory of . . . Mil. 


477 


Those hours, that with gen- 




tle work did frame . Sha. 


1028 


— lines that I before have 




writ do lie . . . " 


1042 


— lips that love's own hand 




did make ..." 


1045 


— parts of thee that the 




world's eye doth view " 


1036 


— pretty wrongs that liberty " 


1033 


— word's were uttered as in 




a pensive mood . Wor. 


236 


Thou art as tyrannous, so 




as thou art . . Sha. 


1044 


— blind fool, love, what 




dost thou to mine eyes " 


1044 


— gentle look . . . Col. 


92 


Though all great deeds . Ing. 


460 


— I beheld at first . . Wor. 


248 


— narrow be that old man's 




cares . . . . " 


239 


— night hath climbed her 




peak .... Ten. 


471 


— the bold wings of poesy 




affect .... W T or. 


241 


— to give timely warning " 
Thought for a death-bed . Bro. 


443 


86 


Thrasymene, Near Lake Wor. 


314 


Three friends of mine . Lon. 


364 


— silences of Molinos . " 


382 1 



141 
Sha. 1031 



1036 
1032 



ia:3 

1C37 



349 
297 



1036 
1042 



221 
444 



1040 
225 



Through death to love . Ros. 247 

Thrush singing in a morn- 
ing walk . . Burns 

Thus can my love excuse 
the slow offense 

— is his cheek the map of 

days outworn . . 
Thy bosom is endeared 

with all hearts . . " 

— gift, thy tables, are with- 

in my brain . . " 

— glass will show thee how 

thy beauties wear . " 

— judgments, Lord, are 

just . . . White 
Tiber, Nile and Thames . Ros. 
Tides, The .... Lon. 
Tired with all these, for 

restful death I cry . Sha. 
'Tis better to be vile than 

vile esteemed . " 

— He whose yesterday 

evening's high disdain W T or. 

— now the dead of night " White 
To Ing. 

— me, fair friend, you never 

can be old . . . Sha. 
Too, too prophetic did thy 

wild note swell . White 
Torrent at Devil's Bridge 

To the. 
Town of Schwytz . 
Tradition 

— Fancy and . 

Trafalgar, Last three from Ros 
Transfigured life 
Tranquillity! 
Translation of Michelan 

gelo . 

Translations from the Por- 
tuguese 

Transubstantiation . 

Trees of the garden . 

Trent, To the river . 

Trepidation of the Druids 

Tributary stream 

Trosachs, The 

Troubles of Charles I. 

True woman 

Twilight, To . 

Two loves I have of com 
fort and despair . 

— rivers, The 
--sayings, The 

— sketches . 
Tyndrum in a storm 
Tynwald Hill 
Tyrolese, Feelings of the 

— Submission of the . 
Uncertainty 
Unthrifty loveliness, why 

dost thou spend 
Untimely lost 
Unwin, Mrs., To 
Vain virtues . 
Valedictory sonnet . 
Vane, Sir Henry, To . 
Vase of life, The 
Vaudois, The 
Venetian pastoral . 

— republic, Extinction of 



. Wor. 


243 


" 


297 


u 


&31 


" 


389 


l Ros. 


297 


" 


256 


Wor. 


408 


. Erne. 


241 


. Bro. 


152 


Wor. 


364 


. Ros. 


270 


White 


311 


. Wor. 


354 


" 


331 


it 


384 


" 


371 


. Ros. 


255 


Wor. 


238 


Sha. 


1045 


Lon. 


383 


Bro. 


85 


" 


90 


Wor. 


385 


" 


403 


" 


278 


" 


279 


M 


355 


Sha. 


1028 


Ros. 


300 


Cow. 


495 


Ros. 


288 


Wor. 


249 


Mil. 


479 


Ros. 


2 r ,3 


Wor. 


364 


Ros. 


158 


Wor. 


270 



Sonnets 
Sound 



484 



Venice .... Lon. 381 

— Scene in ... Wor. 362 
Venus, To the planet Wor. 250, 387 

— verticordia . . . Ros. 150 

— victrix .... "243 
Vienna, Siege of . . . Wor. 286 
Vinci—" Our Lady of the 

Rocks" . . . Ros. 153 
Violet, The. No. 99 (Shakes- 
peare.) . . . Flo. 384 
Virgin, The . . . Wor. 367 
Virtuous young lady, To a Mil. 475 
Visitation of the sick . . Wor. 377 
Vita nuova," On the . Ros. 162 
Vittoria Colonna, To . . Lon. 393 
Wait, prithee, wait!" . Wor. 244 
Waldenses, The ..." 365 
Walsingham, Sir Francis, 

To .... Spe. 27 
Walton's Book of Lives . Wor. 372 
Wansfell! this household 

has a favored lot . " 250 
Wapentake. (To Tennyson.) Lon. 385 
Warning, The . . Goe. 219 

Wars of York and Lan- 
caster . . . Wor. 365 
Was it the proud full sail 

of his great verse . Sha. 1038 
Waterloo, After visiting . Wor. 293 

— Battle of ... "286 
Weak is the will of man . " 233 
Weary with toil, I haste me 

to my bed . . Sha. 1031 

Well have yon railway la- 
borers . . . Wor. 251 

Wellington, Hay don's por- 
trait of ..." 247 

Were't aught to me I bore 

the canopy . . Sha. 1043 

Westminster Bridge, Com- 
posed on . . . Wor. 241 

Westmoreland valley, In a " 230 

Wetherel Church. In . " 408 

What art thou, mighty 

One! . . . White 316 

— aspect bore the man Wor. 328 

— awful perspective ! . . " 380 

— if our numbers barely 

could defy . . . " 274 

— is your substance . Sha. 1034 

— makes us shrink . Byron 242 

— potions have I drunk of ' 

siren tears . . . Sha. 1042 

— were I, love . . . Low. 19 
What's in the brain that 

ink . Sha. 1041; Fav. 17 
When far and wide . Wor. 276 

— forty winters shall be- 

siege . . . Sha. 1028 

— haughty expectations pros- 

trate lie Wor. 237 

— I consider everything that 

grows . . . Sha. 1030 

— I do count the clock " 1029 

— I have borne in memory Wor. 272 

— I have seen by Time's 

feUhand Sha. 1036; Fav. 19 

— ]f3it musing . . . White 369 

— in disgrace with fortune Sha. 1031 

— in the chronicle of wast- 

ed time ..." 1041 



When looking on the pres- 
ent face of things . Wor. 

— most I wink, then do 

mine eyes . . Sha. 

— my love swears that she 

is made of truth . " 

— Philoctetes in the Lem- 

nian isle . . . Wor. 

— the assault was intended Mil. 

— thou shalt be disposed to 

set me light . . Sha. 

— to the sessions of sweet 

silent thought . " 
Whence that low voice? . Wor. 
Where art thou, muse 

Sha. 1040; Fav. 

— lies the land to which 

yon ship must go . Wor. 

— long and deeply . . " 
While Anna's peers and 

early playmates tread ' ' 

— beams of orient light . " 

— not a leaf seems faded " 
Whilst I alone did call upon 

thy aid . . . Sha. 
Whittier, John G., To . . Lon. 
Who is it that says most? Sha. 

— ponders national events Wor. 

— swerves from innocence " 

— will believe my verse . Sha. 

— hast her wish, thou 

hast thy 'Will' 
Why art thou silent? . Wor 

— didst thou promise such 

a beauteous day . Sha. 

— is my verse so barren " 

— minstrel, these untune- 

ful murmurings . Wor. 

— should the enthusiast . " 

— sleeps the future, as a 

snake enrolled . " 

Wilberforce, Wm., To Cow. 

Wild duck"s nest, The . Wor. 
William the Third . 
Willowwood . . . Ros. 
Wine of Circe." (Jones.) " 
Winged hours . . . " 
Winter. (Southey.) Flo. 286; " 

— traveler, The . . White 
Wishing .... Ing. 
With ships the sea was 

sprinkled far . . Wor. 

Without her . . . Ros. 

Woman— her heaven . . " 

Woodstock park . . Lon. 

Words on the window-pane Ros. 

Wordsworth, Rev. Christo- 
pher, To Wor. 

Wordsworth, On portrait of Bro. 

Work . . Bro. 84, 86; Ing. 

World is with me, The . Hood 

Wycliffe, John de . . Wor. 

Ye brood of conscience — 

specters! . . . " 

— hasten to the grave . She. 

— sacred nurseries of bloom- 

ing youth . . . Wor. 

— shadowy beings . . " 

— unseen spirits . . White 

— whose aspirings court 

the muse of lays . " 



273 



1044 



244 

474 



1038 



1031 
331 



244 
250 
236 

1037 
382 

1038 
439 
333 

1030 

1044 
246 

1032 
1037 

228 
397 

381 



373 

251 
155 



313 
443 

233 
253 
255 



250 
82 
443 
184 
365 

443 
434 

241 
406 
347 

314 



485 



Sonnets 
Sound 



Yes, fled already is thy vi- 
tal fire . . . White 

— though he well may 

tremble . . . Wor. 

— 'twill b 3 over soon . White 
Yet may a novice . . Wor. 

— not in vain . . . Lon. 
Young England . . Wor. 



213 



444 
341 



383 
441 



Young lady on her birth 

day, To 
Your love and pity doth . 
Youth and age . 
Youth's antiphony . 
— spring tribute . 
Zante, to . 
Zaragoza! . 



Cow. 483 
Sha. 1041 
Lon. 392 
Ros. 233 



Poe 96 
Wor. 279 



Sonnets, Ecclesiastical Wor. 

— of Shakespeare Sha. 

— on punishment of death - Wor. 

— to liberty and order ----- Wor. 

— to the river Dud don Wor. 

Sons of Edward sleep in Sha. 



Wes. 
Burns 

Hem. 
Byron 
Odys. 

Iliad 

Pope 
Dante 
Dante 
Odys. 
Dante 

- Lon. 
Wor. 

- Ros. 
Dry. 

- Mer. 
Eog. 

- Goe. 
L. of A. 

- Ten. 
White 

- Goe. 
Her. 

- Ten. 
Ros. 

- Sha. 
Cam. 

- Cow. 
Fav. 

Soul's beauty — a sonnet - - Ros. 

— expression, The — a sonnet - - - Bro. 

— j°y> when thou art gone ... - Her. 

— loss, A Mer, 

— science, The - - Mer. 

— sphere, The — a sonnet Ros. 

— traveling Bro. 



of men, behold from far 

— of old Killie — a song - 

— of the fair isle ! forget not the time - 

— of the Greeks, arise ! - 

Soon as Aurora, daughter of the dawn 

— as Aurora heaved her orient head 

— as Glumdalclitch missed -. - - ■ 

— as its final word the blessed flame 

— as the charity of native land - 

— as the morning blushed along the plains 

— as the polar light which never knows 

— as the story reached its end 

— did the almighty giver — a sonnet 

— Soothsay . - 

Sophonisba," Prologue to 

Sorcery 

Sorrento. (Italy.) 

Sorrow, Bliss of— a song - 

— is shadow to life 

— Love and 



Sorrows are mine — then let me joys evade 

— of young Werther, From - 
Sorry I am, my God, sorry I am - 
Soto, c. in Queen Mary ... - 
Soul life — a sonnet 

— of goodness in things evil - 

— of the poet ! wheresoe'er - - 

— that loves God, The. (Mme. Guyon.) 

— The. (Addison.) 



Sound of Mull, In the — a sonnet 



Wor. 



354 
1028 
442 
438 
326 
581 

63 
201 
245 
244 
237 
394 
392 
282 

46 
225 
226 
241 
448 
279 
491 
234 
151 

61 
118 
470 
212 
200 
209 
537 
240 
455 
157 
621 
145 
264 

81 
287 
418 
294 
257 

52 
385 



Sound a q a 

Spenser ^ OD 

Sound of the sea, The - - - Hem. 376 ; Lon. 386 

— over all waters, reach out from all lands Whi. 393 

— Power of ------- - Wor. 210 

— sound the clarion, fill the fife ! ■ - - - Scott 406 

— sweet song ------- Q-oe. 20 

— the fife and cry the slogan - - - Ayt. 71 

— the loud timbrel ------ Moore 343 

Sounds --------- Bro. 55 

Source of love and light of day - - - Cow. 627 

— of love, my brighter sun ... - Cow. 643 

— of the Danube — a sonnet - Wor. 294 
South, The. (R. H. Stoddard.) - - - Flo. 299 

— wind, The - - Erne. 310 

Southern, Mr., To Dry. 279 

— Thomas, To ------ Pope 382 

— cross, Constellation of the - - - Hem. 2Q2 

— statesman, To a - - - - - - Whi. 74 

Southey, Caroline. Autumn flowers - - Flo. 474 

Mariner's hymn Fav. 331 

Sweet-scented cyclamen - - - Flo. 311 

Southey, Eobert. Evening rainbow - - Flo. 435 

First of December Flo. 294 

First of January Flo. 318 

Holly-tree, The - - - - - Flo. 202 

Inchcape rock ------ Fav. 395 

Late spring ------ Flo. 449 

Night - - - Fav. 42 

Old man's comforts - - - Fav. 417 

Eemembrance ------ Fav. 23 

Ship, The ------ Fav. 77 

Sun, The Flo. 427 

Valentine - Flo. 464 

Winter— a sonnet ----- Flo. 286 

Southland Jenny," Remarks on - - Burns 335 

Southward with fleet of ice - - - - Lon. 127 

Southwell, John, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - Sha. 496 

— Sir Robert, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 
Southwick, Cassandra ----- Whi. 28 
Sovereign and a one-pound note — a dialogue Moore 617 

— everlasting lord ------ Wes. 217 

Sow not yere seed on sand islands - - Burns 328 

— with a generous hand ----- Pro. 122 

Sower, The - - - Cow. 62; Low. 61; Sch. 222 

Sowing and reaping ------ Pro. 122 

Space is ample, east and west - - - Erne. 236 

Spade of a friend, To the Wor. 419 

— with which Wilkinson hath tilled - - Wor. 419 
Spake full well, in language quaint - Lon. 4 ; Flo. 406 
Spangling the wave with lights as vain - Scott 262 
Spaniard, Indignation of a — a sonnet - Wor. 281 



487 



Sound 
Spenser 



Spaniel called "Beau," On a- - - - Cow. 502 

Spanish admiral, Gravina, To the - - - Cow. 504 

— air Moore 538 

— cancioneros, From the Lon. 230 

— chapel, The - - Hem. 396 

— girl in reverie. (Holmes.) - Fav. 293 

— guerrilla— a sonnet ----- Wor. 282 

— Gypsy— a play - - - - - . Eliot 141 

— Jews tale, The ----- Lon. 242, 275, 293 



Jew's second tale 
— patriots, To memory of the 

— Student — a play 

— wanderer, Song of the 
Spare her at least 

— her, O cruel England ! 

— me, dread angel of reproof - 

— me thy vengeance. Galloway 
Sparkling eye, The— a song 
Sparrow's nest, The 



- Lon. 
Cam. 

- Lon. 
Hem. 

- Pro. 
Pro. 

- Whi. 
Burns 

- Cow. 
Wor. 

self -domesticated - Cow. 

Spartan mother, The - - - - - Cow. 
Spartan's march, The ----- Hem. 
Speak and tell us, our Ximena - - - Whi. 
^- gently (anon.) _-_..-_ p av> 

— low if you speak love Sha. 

— low to me, my savior ----- Bro. 

— me fair in death ------ Sha. 

— once more, then thou canst not - - IS. S. 

— speak ! thou fearful guest ! - Lon. 25 ; Fav. 

— to him, ladies, see - Sha. 

— ye stones, I entreat ! - - - - - Goe. 
Specter boat, The - Cam. 

— pig, The Hoi. 

Speculation, A ----- - Moore 

Speculations wild that touched - - - Wil. 
Speech of preserved doe. (Biglow papers.) - Low. 
Speechless the Savior stood - Wes. 

— to thousands of others ----- Sen. 
Speed, c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - Sha. 

— the soft intercourse from soul to soul - - Pope 
Speedquick, c. in Faust ----- Faust 
Spell is broke, The ----- Byron 
Spells of home, The ----- Hem. 
Spencer, W. R , Epistle to - Moore 
SPENSER, EDMUND, Poems of: 



Amoretti, or Sonnets (Nos. 1-88) 687 

April. (Shepherd's Calendar.) 530 

Artegall, Legend of 358 

Astrophel— a pastoral elegy . 638 

August. (Shepherd's Calendar.) 547 

Beauty, Heavenly, Hymn of . 662 



Beauty, Hymn in honor of . 
Bellay, Visions of 
Britomartis, Legend of . 
Buckhurst, Lord of, Sonnet to 
Burleigh, Lord, Sonnet to 
Calidore, Sir, Legend of . 



309 
174 

44 
384 

46 
376 
337 
182 

45 

79 
602 
513 
311 
119 

85 
115 

83 
199 

63 
357 
208 
279 
191 

74 
645 
261 
263 
297 
285 

21 
110 
170 
243 
423 
185 



653 
683 
197 
27 
25 
429 



Spenser 
Sponsors 



488 



Calliope. (Tears of the Muses.) 5SG 
Cambel and Triamond, Legend of 281 
Carew, Lady, Sonnet to . . .23 
Castriot, George, Sonnets on his- 
tory of 703 

Chastity. Book hi. of Faery Queen 197 
Clio. (Tears of the Muses.) . 582 
Clorinda, Dolef id Lay of . .631 
Colin Clout's Come Home again 617 

Complaints 566 

Constancy, Legend of 499 
Courtesy. Book vi. of Faery Queen 429 
Cumberland, Earl of, Sonnet to . 26 
Daphnaida— an elegy . . -666 
December. (Shepherd's Calen- 
dar.) 562 

Dedication of the Shepherd "s Cal- 
endar 517 

Doleful Lay of Clorinda . . 631 
Eclogues of the Shepherd's Cal- 
endar 517 

Elegies on Death of Sir Philip Sid- 
ney . ■ • 628, 636, 633 
Elegy on Death of Sir Philip Sid- 
ney ....•• 628 

— or Friend's Passion, for his As- 

trophel 638 

Epilogue to Shepherd's Calendar 565 
Epitaphs: Sidney, Sir Philip, On 641 
Epithalamion for Spenser's wed- 
ding 645 

Erato. (Tears of the Muses.) . 586 
Essex, Earl of. Sonnet to .26 

Euterpe. (Tears of the Muses.) 584 
Faery Queen, The .... 29 
Fair Thanhs stream. (H. B.) . 24 
Fate of the Butterfly, Muiopot- 

mos; or, ... 566 

February. (Shepherd's Calendar.) 524 
Fragments on Mutability . . 499 
Friendship. Book iv. of Faery 

Queen 281 

Glossary to poems . . . .705 
Grev, Lord, of Wilton. Sonnet to 27 
Guyon, Sir, Legend of . . . 109 
Harvey, M. Gabriel, Sonnets 

to 702, 703 

Hatton Sir Christopher, Sonnet to 25 
Heavenly Beauty, Hymn of . . 662 

— Love. "Hymn of . . . 659 
Hobynoll. To the Learned Shep- 
herd 24 

Holiness. Book i. of Faery Queen 23 
Howard, Lord Charles, Sonnet to 27 
Hunsdon, Lord, Sonnet to .27 

Hymns 651 

Ignoto " To look upon a work " . 25 
January. (Shepherd's Calendar.) 522 
July. (Shepherd's Calendar.') . 543 
June. (Shepherd's Calendar.) . 540 
Justice. Book v. of Faery Queen 358 
Knight of the Red Cross, Legend of 29 
Ladies in the Court. Sonnet to . 28 
Learned Shepherd. To the . 24 
Letters: Raleigh, Sir Walter, To 21 
Love, Heavenly. Hymn of . . 659 

— Hymn in honor of . . 651 
March. (Shepherd's Calendar.) 528 
May. (Shepherd's Calendar.) . 534 
Meipomene. (Tears of the Muses.) 583 
Memoir of Edmiml So auser . 13 



Mother Hubberd's Tale, Proso- 

popoia; or, . . . . 598 
Mourning Muse of Thestylis . 633 
Muiopotmos; or, Fate of the But- 
terfly 566 

Muses, Tears of the ... 581 
Mutability. Fragments on . . 499 
N orris, Sir John, Sonnet to . .28 
Northumberland, Earl of, Son- 
net to 26 

November. (Shepherd's Calen- 
dar.) 558 

October. (Shepherd's Calendar.) 554 
Ormond and Ossory, Earl of, Son- 
net to 26 

Oxenford, Earl of, Sonnet to . 26 
Pastoral Eclogue on Death of Sir 

Philip Sidney . . .633 

Pembroke. Countess of, Sonnet to 28 
Petrarch, Visions of 685 

Polyhymnia. (Tears of the Muses.) 588 
Prosopopoia; or, Mother Hub- 
berd's Tale . ... 598 
Prothalamion; or, A Spousal 

Verse 643 

Raleigh, Sir Walter, Letter to . 21 

Sonnet to . . .28 

Vision upon the conceit of 

the Faery Queen . . 23 
Red Cross, Legend of Knight of £9 
Ruins of Rome. (ByBellay.) . 677 

— of Time 572 

Scanderbeg, King of the Epirots, 

Sonnets to .... 703 
September. (Shepherd's Calen- 
dar.) 550 

Shepherd's Calendar . . . 517 
Sidney, Sir Philip. Epitaphs on 641, 642 

Pastorals on death of 628, 633 

Sonnets; or, Amoretti (Nos. 1-88) 687 

— Buckhurst. Lord of, To . .27 

— Burleigh. Lord, To . . . 25 

— Carew, Lady, To ... 28 

— Castriot, George. On history of 703 

— Cumberland, Earl of . . .26 

— Essex, Earl of , To . . . 26 

— Grey. Lord, of Wilton. To . .27 

— Harvey, M. Gabriel, To . .702 

— Hatton. Sir Christopher, To . 25 

— Howard. Lord Charles. To . 27 

— Hunsdon. Lord. To . . .27 

— Ladies in the Court, To . . 28 

— Norris, Sir John. To . . .28 

— Northumberland. Earl of, To 26 

— Ormond and Ossory. Earl of, To 26 

— Oxenford, Earl of, To . . 26 

— Pembroke, Countess of . .28 

— Raleigh, Sir Walter, To . 28 

— Scanderbeg, King of the Epir- 

ots. On .... 703 

— Walsingrham, Sir Francis. To . 27 
Spenser, Edmund, Epithalamion 

for his wedding . . . 645 

Memoir of .... 13 

Tears of the Muses . . .581 
Temperance. Book ii. of Faery 

Queen 109 

Terpsichore. (Tears of the Muses.) 585 
Thalia. (Tears of the Muses.) . 5P3 
Thestylis. Mourning Muse of . 633 
Triamond. Legend of . . . 281 



J.CQ Spenser 

rrOU Snnnsftr 



Sponsors 

Visions of the World's Vanity. 674 
Walsinghani, Sir Francis, Son- 
net to 27 

When Stout Achilles heard. 



Crania. (Tears of the Muses.) . 587 
Virgil's Gnat .... 589 
Vision upon the conceit of the 

Faery Queen ... 23 
Visions of BeUay . . . . 683 I (W. L.) 24 

— of Petrarch .... 685 | World's Vanity, Visions of the .674 

Spenser, Edmund. Lesson of a rose - - Flo. 99 

Ministry of angels - - Fav. 326 

Orange-tree, The ----- Flo. 126 

Sweet is the rose ----- Flo. 520 

Memoir of - Spe. 13 

Epithalamion for his wedding - - Spe. 645 

— a jealous honor er of thine - - - - Keats 249 

— Imitation of - - Col. 51 ; Keats 230 

— Sonnet to --,.-.- Keats 249 

Spenserian stanza Keats 274 

Spheral change - Ros. 287 

Sphinx, The - Erne. 9 

Spider and the dove, The - - - - P. of F. 30 

Spin the ball ! I reel, I burn - - - - Erne. 249 

Spinner, The — a ballad ----- Goe. 117 

Spinning. (Helen Fiske Hunt.) - - - Fav. 441 

— wheel, Song for the ----- Wor. 150 

— wheel, The ------- Lon. 207 

Spinoza, Baruch ------- Sch. 301 

Spinster and knitters in the sun - - - Sha. 289 

Spirit, let us bridegroom call - Goe. 365 

— of joy, thy altar lies ----- Moore 299 

— of lord Erick, c. in Doom of Devorgoil - Scott 524 

— of love ! whose tresses shine - - - Moore 58 

— of poetry, The - - - - - - Lon. 9 

— of solitude, The— a sonnet - - - - Byron 254 

— passed before me, A Byron 196 

— song over the waters ----- Goe. 165 

— that breathed through my lattice - - Bry. 124 

— that rarely comest now - Low. 367 

— whispers - Wil. 310 

— who sweepest the wild harp of time ! - Col. 132 
Spirits are not finely touched - - - - Sha. 67 

— mysteries, The ------ Hem. 416 

— of fire that broad not long - - - Moore 434 

— of the dead Poe 164 

— of the trees - Bro. 187 

— return, A Hem. 200 

— salute — a song Goe. 60 

Spiritual laws - Erne. 236 

— manifestation Whi. 355 

Spiteful letter, On a - - - - - Ten. 488 

Splendor's fondly fostered child ! Col. 195 

Spoils of time. (Shakespeare — sonnets.) - Fav. 17 

Sponsors — a sonnet Wor. 376 



Sports jqa 

Stay * vu 

Sports of Krishna - - - - - - I. S. S. 15 

Spot of my youth! whose hoary branches 

sigh ---__.. Byron 176 

Sprague. Ode on art ------ Fa v. 302 

Spread no wings for sunward flight - L. of A. 158 

— spread thy silver wings, O dove ! - - - Pro. 251 
Spring - - Hoi. 99; Hood 359; Lon. 19; Pope 27 
Spring - - Pro. 333; Ros. 299; Ten. 490; Tho. 8 

— and winter Mer. 458 

— Breathings of - - - - - - - Hem. 421 

— Close of. (Charlotte Smith.) - - - Flo. 457 

— comes hither — a song. (Spanish Gypsy.) - Eliot 176 

— Elegy on approach of . (Milton.) - - Cow. 562 

— Elegy on. (Michael Bruce.) - Fav. 315 

— For — a sonnet Ros. 294 

— has come - - Hoi. 165 

— In early ------- Wor. 413 

— In praise of. (B. W. Procter.) - - - Flo. 408 

— in the lap of winter (anon.) - - - Flo. 397 

— in town - Bry. 103 

— it is cheery — a ballad ----- Hood 145 

— Ode to Sch. 46 

— oracle — a song G-oe. 81 

— Premature ------- Goe. 53 

— song, A. (Edward Youl.) - - - Flo. 412 

— to the world and strength to me - - - Mer. 289 
Springes to catch woodcocks - Sha. 816 

Springfield, Arsenal at Lon. 78 

Squinting poetess, On a - - - - - Moore 645 

Squire and the priest, The - - Cra. 156 

— Thomas ------- Cra. 115 

Squyeres tale, The ------ Cha. 291 

Stabbed with a white wench's black eye - Sha. 722 

Stability of science ------ Hoi. 45 

Stacey, Sophia, Written for - - - - She. 419 

Staff and scrip ------- Ros. 35 

Staffa, Cave of — a sonnet - Wor. 405 

— sprung from high Macdonald - - Scott 387 
Stafford, Sir Humphrey, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 Sha. 496 

— Sir Thomas, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 537 

— William, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 - - - Sha. 496 

— Lord, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - - - Sha. 526 
Stag-eyed lady, The ----- Hood 498 
Staig, Jessie, Epigram on recovery of - Burns 183 
Stand back and let the coffin pass - - Sha. 558 
— ■ here by my side and turn, I pray - - Bry. 225 

— like grey hounds in the slips - - - Sha. 448 

— not upon the order of your going - - Sha. 800 

— still in bright array, ye saints - • - Mil. 154 

— still, my soul, in the silent dark - - - Whi. 92 



4.Q1 Sports 

** 1 Stay 

Stand the omnipotent decree - - - Wes. 79 

— this way — more near the window - - Pro. 30 
Standing with reluctant feet - - - - Lon. 39 
Standish, Rose. (Miss F. M. Caulkins.) - - Flo. 313 
Stands not within the prospect - - - Sha. 789 

— Scotland where it did? ----- Sha. 805 
Stanhope, Earl, To— a sonnet - - - Col. 97 

— Mary C, Valentine to - - - - - Mac. 214 
Stanhope, Mrs., On portrait of - Wil. 322 
Stanley, Miss, Epitaph on - - - - - Tho. 448 

— Sir John, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - - - Sha. 496 

— Sir William, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - Sha. 526 

— Lord, earl of Derby, c. in Richard iii. - Sha. 553 
Stanzas- ----- Bro. Ill; Moore 114 

— for the times ------ Whi. 51, 168 

Star and the glow-worm, The - Wor. 153 

— and water-lily - - - Flo. 164, 377; Hoi. 76 

— editor of, Letter to Burns 420 

— Epigram to editor of Burns 180 

— gazers - Wor. 173 

— of Bethlehem - - - - White 357 ; Whi. 87 

— of descending night ----- Oss. 285 

— of '"Legion of honor," On the - - Byron 260 

— of the brave ! — whose beam hath shed - Byron 260 

— of the moon and eve Cam. 182 

— of the sea, The ----- - Pro. 361 

— of the silver ray !------ Wil. 204 

— Sura of the - - - - - - P. of F. 160 

— that bringest home the bee - Cam. 226 

— The -------- Her. 159 

— To a - - - She. 566 

Starlight -------- Wil. 290 

Starr, Miss A. E. Early morning — a sonnet - Flo. 407 

Starry crowns of heaven - Pro. 243 

Stars' are with the voyager - Hood 154 

— monument, The Ing. 58 

— moon and sun too Ros. 49 

— of the summer night ! • - - - - Lon. 47 

— Secret of the - Hoi. 121 

— Song of the- - Bry. 77; Fav. 369 
Start not, my friend, nor think the muse Moore 286 

— not — nor deem my spirit fled - - - Byron 229 
Starveling, a tailor, c. in Mids. -night's Dream Sha. 161 
Stately yon vessel sails adown the tide - - Fav. 77 
Statesman, yet friend to truth ! - - Pope 262, 343 
Statius, Translation from the Thebais of - Pope 405 
Statue over the cathedral door, The - - Lon. 93 
Staub-bach, On approaching the — a sonnet - Wor. 295 
Stay, bold adventurer, rest awhile thy limbs Wor. 467 

— gentle swains, for tho' in this disguise - Mil. 430 



Stay 
Stream 



492 



Stay, little cheerful robin ! - - - Wor. 452 

— my charmer — a song - Burns 208 

— near me — do not take thy flight ! - - Wor. 79 

— rivulet, nor haste to leave - Bry. 150 

— stay at home — a song - Lon. 379 

— with me, lady, while you may ! - - Mer. 252 

— yet, my friends, a moment stay - - Bry. 234 
Steamboat, Suggested in a - Wor. 399 

— The ------- - Hoi. 29 

Steamboats, viaducts and railways — a sonnet Wor. 409 

Stedman, Edmund Clarence. Doorstep, The Fav. 438 

Steensel, Mvk, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - Tay. 30 

Steeped me in poverty to the - - - Sha. 902 

Steer, helmsman, till you steer our way - - Cam. 308 

Steersman's song, The Moore 151 

Stella, To— from Plato She. 533 

Stephano, c. in Tempest - Sha. 1 

— c. in Merchant of Venice - Sha. 181 
Stephen of England, c. in Otho the Great - Keats 408 
Stepping stones, The— a sonnet - - - Wor. 328 

— westward ------- Wor. 256 

Stern daughter of the voice of God ! - Wor. 421 

— eagle of the far north-west - Scott 432 

— land, we love thy woods ... - Fav. 191 

— ruin's plowshare drive elate - Burns 80 

-- tide of human time ! Scott 309 

Sternhold and Hopkins - - - - • - White 412 

Stethoscope song, The ----- Hoi. 43 

Stewart. True aristocrat - Fav. 76 

— Prof. Dugald, Letters to - - Burns 406, 427 

— Mrs. , of Stair, Letters to - - - - Burns 358 
Stigand, c. in Harold - Ten. 615 
Still anxious to secure your partial favor - Burns 147 

— blush as thinking their own kisses sins - Sha. 728 

— born love — a sonnet ----- Ros. 254 

— constant in a wondrous excellence - - Sha. 1041 

— from the fount of joy's delicious springs Byron 288 

— glides the gentle streamlet on Hood 177 

— green, along our sunny shore - - - Hem. 313 

— harping on my daughter - Sha. 822 

— in thy streets, O Paris ! doth the stain - Whi. 149 

— linger in our noon of time - Whi. 391 

— must I hear? shall hoarse Fitzgerald - Byron 178 

— O Lord, for thee I tarry - Wes. 311 

— on the tower stood the vane - - - Ten. 245 

— sits the schoolhouse by the road - - - Whi. 350 

— still, without ceasing ----- Cow. 643 

— the angel stars are shining - Pro. 28 

— the eternal principal is pure - Wil. 321 

— the question I must parry - - - Moore 76 



493 



Stay 
Stream 



Still thirteen years : 'tis autumn now - - Low. 352 

— through Egypt's desert places - Lon. 402 

— vexed Bermoothes ----- Sha. 4 

— you keep o' the windy side - - - Sha. 295 
Stirling palace, On viewing - Burns 178 
Stoddard, R. H. South, The - Flo. 299 

Summer ------- Flo. 458 

Sketch of William C. Bryant - - - Bry. 1 

Stolen ring, To a — . - - - - - Wil. 268 

Stone, F., Pencil portrait by - - - - Wor. 435 

Stony limits cannot hold love out - - Sha. 720 

Stoop to my window, thou beautiful dove - Wil. 80 

StoiD, christian passer-by ! Col. 20 

— passenger ! — my story's brief - - Burns 130 

— thief ! Dame nature cried to death - - Burns 179 
Stork, To the ------ - Lon. 338 

Stork's vacation, The— a parable - - - Goe. 232 

Storm at sea, In a Moore 136 

— During a — a sonnet ----- Wor. 236 

— had been on the hills ----- Wil. 287 

— of Delphi, The - - Hem. 307 

— The - - - - Her. 222; Mer. 201; Pro. 123 
Storrs, Charles B., To memory of - - Whi. 133 
Story of doom, A ------ i n g. 271 

— of the faithful soul, The - Pro. 323 
Stowe, Mrs. Harriet B. Only a year - - Fav. 66 
Strada's nightingale ----- Cow. 604 

Stradivarius ------- Eliot 102 

Strafford, Lord, c. in Charles the First - She. 484 

Straining harsh discords and - Sha. 730 

Stranded near harbor of Boulogne— a sonnet Wor. 305 

Strange fits of passion ----- Wor. 104 

— lady, The ------- Bry. 172 

— power of genius that can throw - - Moore 592 

— that men, creatures as frail - Rog. 164 

— that one lightly whispered tone - - Hoi. 80 

— was the doom of Heracles, whose shade - Ing. 444 
Stranger ! if e'er thine ardent step - - Scott 278 

— if thou hast learned a truth - Bry. 24 

— in Louisiana, The Hem. 134 

— this hillock of misshapen stones - - - Wor. 467 

— who near this statue chance to roam - Moore 62 

Stranger's heart, The Hem. 236 

Strangford, lord, Epistle to - - - - Moore 112 

Stratfield Saye, Inscription for - - - Rog. 341 

Strathallan's lament — a song - - - Burns 209 

Strato, c. in Julius Csesar - Sha. 764 

Stratton water - - - - - - - Ros. 91 

Stray pleasures Wor. 153 

Stream of life, The - Bry. 212 



Stream 494 

Summer tti/t 

Stream of my fathers ! sweetly still - - Whi. 23 

— The - Cow. 44 

Stream's secret ------ R s. 95 

— that glide in orient plains - - - Burns 109 
Street, The — a sonnet ----- Low. 24 
Strephon and Lydia," Remarks on - - Burns '316 
Stretched on a moldered abbey's broadest wall Col. 199 

— on the dying mother's lap - Wor. 408 

— on the rack of a too easy chair - - - Pope 175 
Strew before our lady's picture - - - Pro. 394 

— me a breathing bed of leaves - - - Moore 39 

Strife and peace Ing. 193 

Strike home, strong-hearted man ! - - Whi. 106 

— the sails !" King Olaf said - Lon. 260 
Strip of blue, A. (Lucy Larcom.) . - Fa v. 428 
Stripped to the naked soul, escaped from clay Pope 382 
Strive, O German, for Roman-like strength - Sch. 263 

— wait, and pray - Pro. 89 ; Fav. 404 

— yet I do not promise ----- Pro. 89 
Striving to better, oft we mar what's well - Sha. 855 
Strolling player, Adventures of a— an essay - Gol. 489 
Strong limbs may dare the rugged road L. of A. 157 

— son of God, immortal love - - - - Ten. 179 

— The ------ - P. of F. 79 

Stronger than woe is will - - - L. of A. 148 

Struck with the rising scene, thus I, amazed Tho. 250 

Struggle of the Britons — a sonnet - - - Wor. 356 

Struggles of conscience, The - - - Cra. 136 

Stuart, Arabella ------ Hem. 149 

Stuarts, Epigram on the - Burns 178 

Student, A - Pro. 49 

Student's tale, The - Lon. 237, 277, 295 

— second tale, The Lon. 288 

Studies for two heads Low. 86 

Study, The ------ - Hoi. 100 

— to break it ------ - Sha. 135 

Stuff the head with such reading - , - - Pope 172 

Sturge, Joseph, In remembrance of - - - Whi. 238 

On departure of. (E. H. W.) - - Whi. 395 

Sub-marine, The Hood 589 

Sub Pondere crescit — a sonnet - - - Low. 22 

Sub-prior, To the - - - - ■ - - Scott 424 

Sublime, emerging from the misty verge - White 344 

— porte, Ode to the Moore 638 

— subject, The Sch. 269 

— was the warning Moore 225 

— type, The. (Divan, viii.) - Goe. 376 
Submission- - - Cow. 80; Her. 184; Wes. 360 
Substitution — a sonnet ----- Bro. 83 
Such age how beautiful ! — a sonnet - - - Wor. 245 



jq^ Stream 

~t*jO Summer 

Such another peerless queen only could - Erne. 290 

— are thoughts ------- Wor. 469 

— as the youth who came to Clymene - - Dante 299 

— characters in color dim I marked - Dante 8 
Such duty as the subject owes - - - Sha. 252 

— fruitless questions may not long beguile Wor. 330 

— harmony is in immortal --•-.■- Sha. 202 

— hope as is the sick despair of good — a fragment She. 506 

— is he who pleaseth me— a song - - - Goe. 73 

— is the custom of Branksome hall - - Scott 8 

— is the law which moves to righteousness L. of A. 151 

— labored nothings, in so strange a style - Pope 49 

— let me seem till such ----- Fav. 204 

— loveliness was first of angels born - - Wil. 189 

— men are dangerous Sha. 766 

— partings break the heart they fondly - Byron 279 

— souls whose sudden visitations daze - - Tay. 62 

— stuff as dreams are made of Sha. 16 

— talent and such piety combined - - White 211 

— were the notes thy once loved poet - - Pope 333 
Sudden gusts came full of meaning - - - Erne. 310 

— light -------- Eos. 147 

Sufferance is the badge of all our tribe - - Sha. 184 

Suffering, Love increased by. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 644 

Sufficer, The ------ P. of F. 170 

Suffolk, Duke of, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - Sha. 496 

— Duke of, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 

— Earl of, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 
Suggested by reading a state paper - - - Whi. 192 
Suicide, Epitaph on a - - - - - Burns 183 

— On grave of a- Cam. 181 

Suicide's argument, The - - - Col. 220 

Suit the action to the Avord - Sha. 827 

Suitors, Death of the - - - - - Odys. 303 

Sul-Malla of Lumon Oss. 275 

Suleika. See Zuleika. 

Suliote mother, The ------ Hem. 146 

Sultan and the potter P. of F. 19 

Summer. (Stoddard.) - Flo. 458 ; Pope 31 ; Tho. 46 

— and winter - - She. 432 

— by the lake-side ------ Whi. 183 

— day by the sea, A - - - - - Lon. 366 

— day's excursion, After a Whi. 162 

— Departure of Hood 1S7 

— eve is gone and past Scott 212 

— evening churchyard - - - She. 396 

— In — a song ------- Goe. 52 

— is gone on swallow's wings - - - Hood 137 

— Parting of Hem. 344 

— ramble, A - Bry. 113 



Summer A OP 

Surely 4yo 

Summer shower, The. (T. B. Read. \ - - Fav. 416 

— storm -------- Low. 6 

— The— Time that was - Mer. 446 

— vacation (prelude) - - - - - Wor. 522 

— was dead and autumn was expiring - - She. 477 

— was on the hills when last - - - - Flo. 89 

— wind - . - - Bry. 57 

Summer's eve, A, Description of - - - White 324 

— gone and over ------- Hood 327 

Summing up in Italy ----- Bro. 611 

Summoned my labor to renew - - - - Wes. 84 

Summons, The- - Whi. 278 

Sumner, Charles- - - - Lon. 358; Whi. 381 

For funeral services of - - - - Hoi. 275 

Sumter, Fort, Our colors at. (Aldrich.) - Fav. 132 
Sun and shadow - Hoi. 162 

— comes, noon comes - - - - - Ten. 492 

— day hymn, A - Hoi. 178 

— Eclipse of the, 1820- - - - - -Wor. 300 

— Hymn to the - Hood 146 

— of the sleepless ----- Byron 194 

— stay thy course, this moment stay - - Cow. 633 

— The. (Southey.) Flo. 427 

— To the - - - - - - - She. 521 

— upon the Weirdlaw hill - Scott 411 

Sunbeam, The Hem. 420 

Sunday -------- Her. 160 

— children, The ------- Sch. 266 

Sundown -------- Lon. 407 

Sunflower. (Shelley.) ----- Flo. 149 

— (constancy). (Moore.) ... - Flo. 150 

— Poesy of the ------- Flo. 146 

— The. (Thomson, Landon, Hood.) - Flo. 147, 148, 149 

-^ To the - - Flo. 147 

Sunlight upon Judea's hills ! Whi. 86 

Sunrise - - Erne. 285 

— on the hills Lon. 8 

— thoughts after a ball ----- Wil. 279 
Sun's shame, The — a sonnet - Ros. 272 

— that set and moons that wane - - - Cow. 611 
Sunset Ing. 516 

— and sunrise — an epigram - - - - Cow. 611 

— fancy, A - - - Mer. 440 

— on the Bear-camp Whi. 404 

— The - She. 398 

— wings Ros. 286 

Sunshine, Day of Lon. 227 

— still must follow rain ----- Arn. 167 
Superfluity comes sooner by white - - - Sha. 182 
Superliminare Her. 106 



aq>j Summer 

^*j i Surely 

Supernaturalism of New England," With copy 

of - Whi. 144 

Superpellico, De - - - - - Her. 565 

Superscription, A — a sonnet - Eos. 274 

Superstition, Ode to - - . - - - Eog. 330 

Supper at the mill ------ Ing. 38 

Supplicum ministrorum raptus - Her. 574 

Supposed confessions ------ Ten. 462 

Suppressed poems ------ Sch. 291 

Supreme being, To the— a sonnet - - - Wor. 231 

— surrender — a sonnet ----- Ros. 230 

Surprise; The ------ Moore 80 

Surprised by joy — impatient — a sonnet - Wor. 232 

Sur la mort d'une jeune fille. (Malesherbes.) Flo. 354 

Sura fifty-nine P. of F. 33 

— of Al-Akhaf P. of F. 80 

— of Al-Kauthar - - - - - -P. of F. 82 

— of cleaving asunder - - - P. of F. 93 

— of counsel - - - - - - - P. of F. 76 

— of daybreak - - - - - - P. of F. 131 

— of Imram's family - - - - - P. of F. 65 

— of Jonas - - P. of F. 75 

— ofK P. ofF. 140 

— of light - P. of F. 181 

— of the afternoon - - - - -P. of F. 170 

— of the bee - - - - - - P. of F. 84 

— of the cattle P. of F. 42 

— of the cow ----- P. of F. 106, 112 

— of the earthquake P. of F. 120 

— of the emigration P. of F. 162 

— of the forenoon - P. of F. 170 

— of the inevitable P. of F. 88 

— of the merciful P. of F. 163 

— of the moon - P. of F. 139 

— of the night star P. of F. 87 

— of the signs P. of F. 125 

— of the star - P. of F. 160 

— of troops P. of F. 168 

— of women - - - - - - P. of F. 90, 167 

— of Ya Sin P. of F. 184 

— the nine and fiftieth - - - - -P. of F. 33 

— the seven and fiftieth : there is writ - P. of F. 142 
Sure, he that made us with - Sha. 835 

— Lord, there is enough in thee to dry - - Her. 307 

— never yet was antelope - Ten. 484 

— there's a dearth of wit in this dull town - Dry. 507 

— there's a fate in plays and 'tis in vain - Dry. 279 

— 'twas by Providence designed - - - Gol. 136 
Surely a sense of our mortality - - - Rog. 165 

— those sages err who teach - Hood 520 

32 



Surrender zLQS 

Sweet * vo 

Surrender, The entire. (Mme. Guyon.) - Cow. 631 

Surrey, Duke of, c. in Richard ii. - - - Sha. 356 

— Earl of, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - - - Sha. 409 

— Earl of, c. in Henry viii. - - - - Sha. 592 

— Earl of, c. in Richard hi. - - - - Sha. 556 

Sursum corda - - - - - - - Erne. 80 

Surveyor to Buckingham, a in Henry viii. Sha. 592 

Survivor sole, and hardly such, of all - - Cow. 479 

Suspicion always haunts the - Sha. 554 

Suspiria -------- Lon. 135 

Sutherland, c. in Halidon Hill - - - Scott 462 

Svend Dyring he rideth adown the glade - Lon. 312 

— King, of the forked beard - Lon. 259 
Swain, Charles. Aspen tree, The - - - Flo. 184 

Something cheap ----- Fav. 213 

Swain, W. W. (The last look.) - Hoi. 145 

governor, To - - - - - - Hoi. 125 

Swainston, In the garden at Ten. 536 

Swallow, Ode to the - - Bro. 180 

— The. (Mme Guyon.) - - Cow. 617; Mer. 460 

— To the - - - - - - - - Cow. 516 

Swan song of parson Avery, The - - - Whi. 229 
Swann, K., Letters to - - White 108, 112, 127, 131 

Swanwick, Anna, translator of Faust - Faust 1 

Swears a prayer or two ----- Sha. 717 

Sweden, Epigram to the queen of. (Milton.) Cow. 572 

— King of — a sonnet ----- Wor. 270 
Sweep on, you fat and greasy citizens - - Sha. 210 
Sweet and low, sweet and low - - - Ten. 136 

— are the rosy memories of the lips . - - Mer. 174 

— are the uses of adversity - Sha. 210 

— as the tender fragrance that survives - - Lon. 380 

— Auburn I loveliest village of the plain Gol. 86 ; Fav. 25 

— babe ! true portrait of thy father's face - Lon. 20 

— bird, whom the winter constrains - - Cow. 603 

— brier. (Leigh Hunt.) - - - - • - Flo. 477 

— brier, To the. (Brainard.) - - - Flo. 115 

— chimes ! that hi the loneliness - - - Lon. 408 

— closes the evening on Craigieburn wood Burns 235 

— day, so cool, so calm, so bright Her. 176 ; Fav. 329 

— dimness of her loosened hair's downfall - Ros. 237 

— echo, sweetest nymph - - Mil. 440 ; Flo. 47 

— Emma Moreland of yonder town - - - Ten. 107 

— evenings come and go, love - Eliot 132 

— fa's the eve on Craigie-burn - - - Burns 235 

— faces that from pictured casements - - Lon. 384 

— flower ! belike one day to have - - - Wor. 491 

— flower ! that peeping from thy russet Col. 60 ; Flo. 463 

— floweret, pledge o' meikle love - - - Burns 134 

— friend, the world, like some fair - - - Sch. 101 



499 



Surrender 
Sweet 



Sweet girl ! though only once we met - - Byron . 154 

— herald of the ever gentle spring - Flo. 64 

— Highland girl, a very shower - - - Wor. 255 

— Innbfallen ------ Moore 269 

— is fond love, but funeral- flames - L. of A. 155 

— is the breath of morn, her rising sweet - Mil. 99 

— is the cup of bitterness which cometh - P. of F. 128 

— is the harp of prophecy ; too sweet - - Cow. 358 

— is the holiness of youth - Wor. 368 

— is the rose— a sonnet - - - Spe. 691 ; Flo. 520 

— is the scene where genial friendship - Hoi. Q6 

— is true love, tho' given in vain - - - Ten. 320 

— Iser ! were thy sunny realm - - - Cam. 255 

— jasmine, long may thy elegant flower - Flo. 123 

— lady ! look not thus again ! Moore 84 

— little man, The ------ Hoi. 157 

— love, — but oh, most dread desire - - Eos. 253 

— renew thy force ; be it not said — a sonnet - Sha. 1035 

— Mary, I have never breathed - - - Hoi. • 78 

— meat has sour sauce ----- Cow. 451 

— memory wafted by thy gentle gale - - Eog. 276 

— mercy ! — a sonnet Col. 93 

— mercy is nobility's true - Sha. 689 

— moon ! if like Crotona's sage - - Moore 113 

— naivete of feature Burns 181 

— nymph, who art, it seems, accused - - Cow. 488 

— pea, Poesy of the ----- Flo. 178 

— peace, where dost thou dwell? - Her. 213; Fav. 332 

— poison for the age's tooth - Sha. 334 

— remembrances. (Thomas Moore.) - - Fav. 214 

— scented cyclamen. (Mrs. Southey.) - Flo. 311 

— scented flowers! who art wont to White 24; Flo. 70 

— ledge, The. (Calder CampbeU.) - - Flo. 212 

— seducer ! blandly smiling - - - Moore 72 

— seem your wedded days - - - P. of F. 103 

— sensibility ------ Burns 139 

— shone the sun on the fair lake - - - Scott 471 

— Sirmio ! thou, the very eye - - - Moore 603 

— sleeky doctor ! dear pacific soul - - Tho. 415 

— smile ! the daughter of the queen of love - Spe. 693 

— smiles of May | ----- - Goe. 157 

— spirit ! if thy airy sleep - - - - Moore 80 

— spirit, sister of that orphan one - - She. 357 

— star, which, gleaming o'er the darksome - She. 566 

— stars of clear and cloudless night - - Byron 256 

— stream-fed glen, why say farewell - Eos. 164, 268 

— stream that winds through yonder glade Cow. 44 

— sweet sister ! let me weep awhile ! - - Hem. 222 

— tenants of this grove ! - - - - - Cow. 643 

— Teviot ! on thy silver tide - Scott 22 



Sweet kaa 

Tales °V\J 

Sweet the memory is to me - Lon. 361 

— thou hast trod on a heart - Bro. 595 

— to the gay of heart — a sonnet - - - White 378 

— twining hedge flowers wind-stirred - - Ros. 232 

— tyrant love — but hear me now ! - - Tho. 465 

— valley, say ------- Tho. 471 

— warrior ! when shall I have peace - - Spe. 696 

— were the days when thou didst lodge - - Her. 188 

— william. (Cowley.) Flo. 167 

— william, Poesy of ----- - Mo. 167 

— william small has form and aspect - - Flo. 167 
Sweetest eyes were ever seen - Bro. 99 

— love ! I'll not forget thee - Moore 107 

— May — a song ------ Burns 290 

— melodies are those that - - - - Wor. 419 

— of all childlike dreams ----- Whi. 321 

— of sweets, I thank ! when displeasure - Her. 149 

— Savior, if my soul Her. 206 

Sweetheart, To an old Burns 93 

Sweets to the sweet, farewell - Sha. 842 

Swell, bosom, with thy fraught - - - Sha. 896 

Swellf oot, c. in CE lipus Tyrannus - - - She. 323 

Swift, Jonathan, Imitation of Pope 449 

Swift as a shadow, soft as any dream - - Sha. 162 

— as a spirit hastening to his task - - She. 493 
Swifter far than summer's flight - - - She. 440 

— than arrow from Tartar's bow - Sha. 170 
Swiftly turn the murmuring wheel ! - - Wor. 150 

— walk over the western wave - - - She. 436 
Swift's ancestors, On ------ Pope 395 

Swimming from Sestos to Abydos, After - Byron 243 

Swinton, c. in Halidon Hill - - - - Scott 462 

Swiss air - Moore 538 

— Alps, The— an antique ----- Goe. 273 

— goatherd, The Wor. 299 

— song Goe. 75 ; Hem. 132 

— tradition, A - - Hem. 130 

Switzerland, In - ' - Mer. 251 

— Subjugation of — a sonnet - Wor. 271 

Switzer's wife, The Hem. 160 

Sword of Castruccio Castrucani - - - Bro. 610 

— of the tomb, The Hem. 125 

Swords cannot cut the giving hand - - Erne. 289 

Sycamores, The ------- Whi. 227 

Sylph was it? or a bird more bright - - Wor. 156 

Sylph's ball, The ----- Moore 599 

Sylvander (pseudonym — see Burns) - - Burns 562 

Sylvarum liber ------- Mil. 534 

Symbol, A— The mason's trade - - - Goe. 246 

Symbolism of flowers - . - - - - Flo. 213 



0\J L Tales 

Symbols -------- Goe. 240 

Syme, John, Extempore to Burns 184 

Letter to ------ Burns 496 

Symonds, C. Harebell, The - Flo. 207 

Sympathies Hoi. 191 

Sympathy - Moore 83 

— with Christ Wes. 327 

Symptoms of love Cow. 28 

Table of Errata Hood 430 

— song Goe. 87 

— talk - Cow. 131 

Tables turned, The ------ Wor. 412 

Taddeo Gaddi built me, I am old - - Lon. 368 

Tailor, The— a song ----- Burns 225 

Tait, Crawford, Letter to Burns 459 

— James, Epistle to Burns 170 

Tak your auld cloak about ye," Remarks on Burns 321 

Take a bond of fate - - - - - - Sha. 802 

— all my loves, my love, yea — a sonnet - Sha. 1033 

— away that star and garter - Ayt. 134 

— back the sigh, thy lips of art - - - Moore 125 

— back the virgin page - Moore 220 

— cradled nursling of the mountain — a sonnet Wor. 327 

— hence the bowl -'.-'-'"'-- Moore 533 

— him, O earth, and round his lovely head Fav. 41 

— mine ease in mine inn ----- Sha. 399 

— O take those lips away - Sha. 82 

— physic, pomp ; expose thyself - - - Sha. 863 

— take away thy barbarous hand - • Cra. 509 

— the diamonds from thy hair ! Mer. 424 

— the world ! " Zeus exclaimed - - - Sch. 187 

— them, O death ! and bear away - - - Lon. 135 

— these broken reeds away ! - - - - Wes. 41 

— these flowers which purple waving - - Scott 373 

— this kiss upon the brow ! - Poe 93 

— thy beak from out my heart - - - Poe 57 

— to thy bosom, gentle earth, a swain - Cow. 514 
Taking of Quebec Gol. 138 

— the measure of an unmade - Sha. 729 
Talbot, John, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 

— Lord, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 

To memory of Tho. 432 

Tale of a trumpet Hood 291 

— ofMelibeus ------- Cha. 414 

— of Sir Thopas, The -.---.- Cha. 406 

— of the 14th century ----- Hem. 72 

— of the doctor of phisik * ' - Cha. 364 

— of Villa Franca Bro. 350 

Tales founded on fact - Cow. 387, 500 



Tales Kf\0 

Telemachus ^^^ 

Tales froro. Chaucer ------ Dry. 321 

— of a wayside inn Lon. 232 

— of George Crabbe, Preface to Cra. xiv 
Talefourd. 'Tis a little thing - - - Fav. 41 

Taliesin's prophecy - Hem. 246 

Talismans - - Goe. 363 

Talk not of grief till thou hast seen - - - Hem. 223 

— not of love, it gives me pain - - * Burns 112 

— not of wasted affection Lon! 108 

— not to me of savages Burns 188 

Talking oak, The ------ Ten. 82 

Talks as familiarly of roaring lions - - Sha. 339 

Tallien, c. in Fall of Robespierre - - - Col. 382 

Tallyho ! tallyho ! Through rain, hail - - She. 334 

Tarn glen — a song Burns 225 

Tarn O'Shanter !— a tale Burns 130 

— Samson's elegy Burns 94 

— the Chapman, Epitaph on - - - - Burns 185 
Tambourgi ! Tambourgi ! thy larum afar Byron 298 
TameXenia - - - - - - - Goe. 262 

Tamerlane - Poe 150 

Taming of the Shrew — a comedy - - - Sha. 229 

Tamora, c. in Titus Andronicus - - - Sha. 688 

Tancred and Sigisnmnda," Epilogue to - Tho. 478 

Prologue to ------ Tho. 477 

Tandem, chare, tuse mihi pervenere tabellse Mil. 513 

Tannhauser -------- Mer. 312 

Taper, Sonnet to a - - - - - - White 347 

Tapping at my chamber door - - - - Poe 51 

Tarry woo, " Remarks on - Burns 306 

Tarrytown, In the churchyard at— a sonnet - Lon. 380 

Tarsus, Governor of , c. in Pericles - - Sha. 977 

Tartar song — the Fugitive - Lon. 336 

Tartarus, Group from Sch. 42 

Task, The - - - Cow. 247 

Tasmin and Salsabil - - - - P. of F. 103 

Tasso. Laurel, The Flo. 152 

— and his sister Hem. 398 

— Lament of - Byron 206 

— Release of Hem. 399 

— Scene from She. 457 

— Song for - - She. 457 

Taste, Imagination and ----- Wor. 581 

Taught as by thorns and briers, we know - Wes. 264 

— by long experience, Lord - Wes. 286 
Tauter, John ------- Whi. 190 

Taurus, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 

Tax not the royal saint with vain expense - Wor. 380 

Taylor, Bayard. Goblet, The - - - - Fav. 218 

On the sea - - - ■ - - - Fav. 144 



503 



Tales 
Telemachus 



Taylor, Bayard. Proposal - - - - Fav. 

Taylor, Bayard ------ Lon. 

TAYLOR, HENRY. Philip Van Artevelde— 
a dramatic romance. 



70 
394 



Philip Van Artevelde— a play . 
Characters : Ackerman Franz 

— Adriana Van Merestyn . 

— iEswin, Van, a squire 

— Arlon, Sir Walter d' 

— Bette, Sir Simon, a citizen 

— Bourbon, Duke of . 

— Burgundy, Duke of . 

— Cecile, an attendant 

— Charles VI. of France 

— Clara Van Artevelde 

— Coucy. Lord of . 

— Elena della Torre . 

— Flanders, Earl of 

— Fleureant, Sir, of Heurlee . 

— Grutt. Sir Guisebert, a citizen 

— Guy, Lord of Occo ... 30 

— John de Vien, Sir, Admiral of 

France .... 232 

— John of Heda, a monk . . 30 

— Mareschault, Sir Robert . 30 

— Matthew, Gilbert . . .30 

— Oliver of Clisson, Sir, Constable 232 



30 
232 
232 

30 
532 



Characters: Raoul of Raneval, 

Sir 232 

— Roosdyk, a commander . 232 

— Saimpi, Lord of . . . . 232 

— Saint Just, Lord of . . .232 

— Sanxere. Lord of 232 

— Steensel, Myk, a citizen . . 30 

— Tristram of Lestovet . . 232 

— Ukenheim, a citizen. . . 30 

— Van Artevelde, Clara . . 30 

— Van Artevelde, Philip . . 30 

— Van den Bosch, Peter . . 30 

— Van Drongelen, Henry, a page 30 

— Van Merestyn, Adriana . . 30 

— Van Muck, a dean. . . .30 

— Van Nuitre, Peter ... 30 

— Van Ryk. a dean . . .30 

— Van Stockenstrom, a citizen of 

Ypres 232 

— Van Whelk, a citizen of 

Ypres 232 

— Vauclaire, a commander . 232 

— Voorst, Dame, of Ypres . . 232 



To the jasmine 



- Flo. 
Burns 

- Mil. 
Her. 

- Pope 
Erne. 

P. of F. 
Wes. 
Sha. 



Taylor, Jane. 

— John, To 

Te, qui conspicuus baculo fulgente solebas 
Teach me, my God and king - 

— me to feel another's woe 

— me your mood, O, patient stars 

— my tongue to frame this worship 
Teacher divine with melting eye - 
Teaches such beauty as a woman's eye - 
Teaching of Cupid ------ Cow. 

Teachings of Eva. (Mrs. E. Oakes Smith.) Flo. 

Tear, A - Byron 

— forever the garland of Homer - - - Sch. 

— On a Rog. 238 ; Fav. 

— The --- - Byron 156 ; Moore 100 ; She. 
Tears — a sonnet ------ Bro. 

— flow and cease not where the good man lies Cow. 

— I shed must ever fall, " Remarks on - Burns 

— idle tears - Ten. 143 ; Fav. 46 ; Poe 

— in solitude Col. 

— of a painter, The ------ Cow. 



of genius, The. (Melnoth.) 
— of heaven, The 

— of Scotland, Remarks on - 

— of the muses - 
Teetotaler, Ode altered by a - 
Tefkir Nameh. (Divan, iv.) 
Tegner's Drapa 
Telemachus, Return of 



Gol. 

- Ten. 
Burns 

- Spe. 
Hoi. 

• Goe. 

Lon. 

Odys. 



123 
116 
515 
288 
222 
277 

61 
165 
149 
523 
468 
256 
228 
207 
564 

83 
495 
338 

46 
139 
607 

55 
470 
318 
581 
176 
367 
133 
211 



Tell 
Tennyson 



504 



Tell, William - - Bry. 118; Sch. 286 

Birthplace of ------ Col. 200 

Tell her, O tell her, the lute she left lying - Moore 657 

— me, eyes, what 'tis ye're seeking - - - Goe. 69 

— me, gentle youth, I pray thee - - - Moore 26 

— me, good Hobbinoll, what gars the greet? Spe. 530 

— me how to punish thee - - '■ - - Moore 25 

— me, my soul, can this be death? - Pope 359 

— me not, in mournful numbers - - - Lon. 2 

— me now in what hidden way - - - Eos. 136 

— me, O Provincial ! speak Ceruleo-nasal - Hoi. 182 

— me, on what holy ground Col. 44 

— me, Perigot, what shall be the game - Spe. 547 

— me that thou yet art true. (Eiddel.) - Burns 268 

— me the witching tale again - Moore 184 

— me, thou soul of her I love - - - - Tho. 460 

— me, thou star, whose wings of light She. 464 ; Fa v. 84 

— me, where is fancy bred - Sha. 193 

— me why, my sweetest dove - Moore 28 

— me, ye bards, whose skill sublime - - Cam. 128 

— me, ye zephyrs ! that unfold - - - "Wor. 142 

— the foliage of the woods - Moore 27 

— this soul with sorrow laden - Poe 57 

— truth and shame the devil - Sha. 395 

— us, O guide ! by what strange - - - Mo. 473 
Telling the bees ------- Whi. 22Q 

Telltale lyre, The ------ Moore 115 

Temora— an epic poem ----- Oss. 399 

Temper, The - Her. 138 3 139 

Temperance and sobriety - - ' - - - Her. 419 

— Book ii. of Faery Queen - Spe. 109 
Temperate is the Being — ruler. Mend ! - - Sch. 41 
Tempest, Song of the. (Pirate.) - - Scott 432 

— The — a comedy Sha. 1 

— The. (Fields.) Fav. 149; Wes. 345 

— The, Prologue to - Dry. 480 

Temple, Sir Eichard. Epistle to - Pope 223 

Temple of fame, The - ----- - Pope 451 

— The ------- - Her. 89 

— to friendship, A Moore 521 

Temptation - Cow. 76 

— At the approach of Wes. 348 

— hath a music ior all ears - Wil. 97 

— In - - Wes. 351 

Temptations from Eoman refinements - Wor. 355 

Ten years ago. (Alaric Alex. Watts.) - Fav. 343 

Tender and true. (Mulock.) - Fav. 402 

Tenderly do we feel by nature's law— a sonnet Wor. 442 

Tennant, John, Letter to - - - - Burns 424 



505 



Tell 
Tennyson 



TENNYSON, ALFKED, Poems of: 



Achilles over the French . . 724 
Adeline . . . . . . 15 

Alexandra, Welcome to . . . 388 
Alice, Princess, Dedicatory to 661, 707 
All good things have not kept aloof 476 

— things will die .... 467 

Amphion 105 

Anacreontics .... 482 

Answer, The 491 

Arabian Nights, Recollections of 11 

Arrival, The 102 

Arthur, Coming of 397 

— Death of 64 

— Passing of .... 433 
As when with downcast eyes . 481 
Ask me no more .... 170 
At the window .... 490 
Audley Court .... 72 
Ay," Be merry, all birds, to-day" 491 
Aylmer's Field .... 357 
Balaklava, Charge of Heavy Brig- 
ade at 728 

Ballad of Oriana .... 20 
Battle of Brunanburh. . . 722 
Beggar Maid, The . . . .115 
Blackbird, The .... 54 

Boadicea 393 

Bonaparte, Napoleon . . .477 
Break, Break, Break . . . 118 
Britons, guard your own . . 485 
Brook, The— an idyl . . .241 
Brookfield, Rev. W. H. . . 720 
Brunanburh, Battle of . . .722 
Burial of Love .... 465 
Burleigh, Lord of . . . .113 
But were I loved— a sonnet . 477 
Captain, The— a legend . . .390 
Cauteretz, In the Valley of . 386 

Character, A 15 

Characters: Aldred, Archbishop 

of York . . Harold 615 

— Aldwyth, dtr. of King of Wales. 

Harold 615 

— Alice, queen's lady. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Alva, Duke of. " 537 

— Antony Knyvett. " 537 

— Athelric, canon from Waltham. 

Harold 615 

— Bagenhall, Sir Ralph. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Bedingfield, Sir Henry. " 537 

— Bonner, Edmund, bishop. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Bourne, Father . " 537 

— Brett, Captain . " 537 

— Cecil, Sir William. " 537 

— Clarence, Lady . " 537 

— Cole, Father . . " 537 

— Courtenay, Earl of Devon. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Cranmer, archbishop. " 537 

— Edith, ward of King Edward. 

Harold 615 

— Edward the Confessor. " 615 

— Edwin, Earl of Mercia. " 615 

— Elizabeth, a princess. 

Queen Mary 537 
- Exeter, Marchioness of. " 537 



Characters: Feria, Count de 

Queen Mary 537 

— Gamel, a Northumbrian thane. 

Harold 615 

— Gardner, Stephen, bishop. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Gurth, Earl of East Anglia. 

Harold 615 

— Guy, Count of Ponthieu. " 615 

— Harold, Earl of Wessex. " 615 

— Heath, Sir N., archbishop. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Howard, Lord William " 537 

— Hugh Margot, a Norman monk. 

Harold 615 

— Joan, a country wife. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Le Sieur de Noailles, embassa- 

dor . . Queen Mary 537 

— Leofwin, Earl of Kent. 

Harold 615 

— Magdalen Dacres, Lady. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Morcar, Earl of Northumbria. 

Harold 615 

— Norman Bishop of London. 

Harold 615 

— Osgod, canon from Waltham. 

Harold 615 

— Paget, Lord . Queen Mary 537 

— Peter Martyr . . " 537 

— Peters, gentleman of Lord How- 

ard . . Queen Mary 537 

— Petre, Lord . . " 537 

— Philip, King of Spain. " 537 

— Queen Mary . . " 537 

— Queen of Edward the Confessor. 

Harold 615 

— Reginald Pole, a cardinal. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Roger, servant to Noailles. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Rolf, a Ponthieu fisherman. 

Harold 615 

— Simon Renard, embassador. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Soto .... " 537 

— Southwell, Sir Robert. " 537 

— Stafford, Sir Thomas. " 537 
Stigand, Archbishop of Canter- 
bury . . . Harold 615 

— Thirlby, Thomas, bishop. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Tib, a country wife. " 537 

— Tostig, Earl of Northumbria. 

Harold 615 

— Villa Garcia . Queen Mary 537 

— White, Sir Thomas, Lord Mayor. 

Queen Mary 537 

— William Malet, a Norman no- 

ble ... Harold 615 

— William of Normandy . " 615 
- William Ruf us . . " 615 

— Willam, servant to Wyatt. 

Queen Mary 537 

— Williams of Thame, Lord. " 537 

— Wulfnoth . . . Harold 615 

— Wyatt, Sir Thomas. 

Queen Mary 537 



Tennyson 



506 



Charge of the Heavy Brigade at 
Balaklava .... 

— of the Light Brigade . 
Check every outflash — a sonnet 

Child-songs 

Children's Hospital, In the 
Chorus in an unpublished drama 
Circumstance 
City Child, The 
Claribel— a melody 
Clear-headed Friend 
Columbus .... 
Come not when I am dead 
Coming of Arthur 
Coquette, Three sonnets to a 
Could I outwear my present state 
Daisy, The .... 

Dante, To 

Day-dream, The— a prologue 
DeProfundis. The Two Greetings 
Death, Love and . 

— of Arthur .... 

— of the Old Year 

— of Wellington— an ode 
Dedication, A 

Dedicatory to Princess Alice 
Defense of Lucknow . 
Departure, The 
Deserted House, The . 
Despair — a dramatic monologue 
Dirge, A 

Dora 

Dream of Fair- Women 

Dualisms 

Duty, Love and . 

Dying Swan, The . 

Eagle, The— a fragment . 

Edinburgh, Duke of, Welcome 

Edward Gray 

Edwin Morris ; or, The Lake 

Elaine— an idyl . 

Eleanore 

Elegiacs .... 
English Idyls .... 

— war-song .... 
Enid— an idyl .... 
Enoch Arden 
Entail, The ; or, the Village Wife 
Epic, The .... 
Epilogue to the Day-dream 
Ettare, Pelleas and 
Every day hath its night 
Experiments 
Fair Women, Dream of . 
Farewell, A . 
Fatima .... 
FirstQuarrel 
Flower, The 
Forgetfulness, Love, Pride and 
Franklin, Sir John, on the ceno 

taph . 
Frederica, Princess, on her mar 



101 

719 

19 

60 

54 

246 

390 

661, 707 

661 

103 

18 

725 

19 



nage . . . . 
Gardener's Daughter, The 
Gareth and Lynette . 
Godiva .... 



Golden Apple, The 

— Supper, The 

— Year, The . 
Gone! 
Goose, The . 



252 
4^3 
684 
705 
469 
21 
684 

10 
711 
118 

397 
391 
471 
249 



to 



729 



65 

492 
94 

478 
449 

86 
490 

59 



Grandmother, The . . . .378 
Grasshopper, The . . . .469 

Gray, Edward 107 

Greece, To E. L., on his travels in 111 



. 328 
114 

. 487 
615 

. 728 
395 

. 467 
478 
444 



Guinever— an idyl . 

— and Launcelot . 
Hands all round 
Harold — a play . 
Heavy Brigade, Charge of 
Hendecasyilabics 
Hero to Leander . 
Hesperides, Tne . 
Higher Pantheism, The . 

Hoi Reontez 475 

Holy Grail, The . . . 397, 405 
Home they brought him slain . 392 
How " and the " why," The . . 462 
Hugo, Victor, Sonnet to . . 721 
Human Cry, The . . . .720 
I send you here a sort of allegory 36 
I stood on a tower in the wet . 488 
I' the glooming light . . . 465 
I thought to pass away before . 45 
Idyls of the King . ... 253 
Iliad, Specimen of, in blank verse 396 
In Memoriam . . . . 179 

— quantity 395 

— the Garden at Swainston . 536 

— the Valley of Cauteretz . . 386 
International Exhibition, Open- 
ing of 389 

Invasion of Poland, Sonnet on 

Isabel 

Islet, The .... 
K, J. M., Sonnet to 

Kate 

Kraken, The .... 
Lady Clara Vere de Vere . 

— Clare 

— let the rolling drums 

— ofShalott . . 

— Sleeping, To a . 
Lake, Tne; or, Edwin Morris . 
Last Tournament, The 
Launcelot and Queen Guinever 
Letter, The .... 
Letters, The .... 
Light Brigade, Charge of the 

Lihan 

Locksley Hall 

Lord of Burleigh, The . 

Lost Hope .... 

Lotus-eaters, The 

Love 

— and Death 

— and Duty .... 

— and Sorrow 

— Burial of ... . 

— Pride and Forgetfulness 
Lover's Tale, The . 
Lucknow, Defense of . 
Lucretius . . . • . 
Lynette, Gareth and . 
Macready, Wm. Charles, Son- 
net to . 

Madeline . 

Maeldune, Voyage of . 
Margaret . 
Mariana 

— in the South 
Marriage morning . 



481 

8 

'387 

22 
480 
473 

41 
112 



471 
. 75 
519 
114 



252 
8 

89 
113 
470 

46 
472 

19 

85 
470 



661 
444 
492 

485 
10 

715 

53 

9 

25 



507 



Tennyson 



Maud 219 

Maurice, Rev. F. D., To . . . 251 
May Queen, The . ... 4:2 
Me my own fate to lasting sorrow 483 
Memory, Ode to . . . . 13 

Mermaid, The 22 

Merman, The .... 21 
Miller's Daughter, The ... 28 
Milton— alcaics .... 395 
Mine be the strength of spirit— a 

sonnet 476 

Minnie and Winnie .... 684 
Montenegro — a sonnet . . 721 
Morte d'Arthur . . . .60 
Mourner, On a . . . .392 
Move eastward, happy earth . , 118 
My hope and heart is with thee . 22 

Mystic, The 468 

Napoleon Bonaparte . . . 477 

National Song 474 

New Timon and the Poets . . 484 

— Year's Eve 43 

No answer .... .491 

— more 482 

North, Christopher, To . .482 
Northern Cobbler, The . . .692 

— Farmer (old style) . . 381 

(new style) . . . .441 

Nothing will die .... 466 
O Beauty, passing beauty ! . . 477 

— Darling Room .... 482 
Ode at Opening of International 

Exhibition . . . 389 

CEnone 31 

Old Year, Death of the . . 54 
Oldcastle, Sir John, Lord Cobham 707 

On the Hill 489 

Oriana, Ballad of . . . .20 
Owl, The— a song ... 11 
Palace of Art, The . . . .37 
Passing of Arthur . . . 433 
Pelleas and Ettarre . . .422 
Plays: Harold .... 615 

— Queen Mary 537 

Poet, The 16 

Poet's Mind, The .... 17 

— Song, The 118 

Polish Insurrection, On the . . 481 
Pride and Forgetfulness, Love . 469 
Princess, The— a melody . .119 
Prologue to the Day-dream . 101 

— to the Princess . . . .119 
Queen Victoria, To 7 
Epilogue to the Idyls . . 533 

— Guinever and Launcelot . 114 

— Mary— a play . . . .537 

— of the May .... 42 
Recollections of Arabian Nights 11 

Requiescat 387 

Revenge, The .... .657 
Revival, The .... 103 
Ringlet, The ... .388 

Rizpah 689 

Rosalind 479 

Sailor-boy, The .... 387 
Saint Agnes 106 

— Simeon Stylites ... 78 

Sainted Juliet 465 

Sea Dreams 372 

— Fairies, The . . .17, 475 
Shall the hag Evil die . . . 471 



Shalott, Lady of ... 
Show-day at Battle Abbey . 

Sin, Vision of 

Sir Galahad 

— Launcelot and Guinever . 
Sisters, The .... 36, 
Skipping-rope, The 

Sleeping Beauty, The . 

— Palace, The 

Songs of the Wrens . 

Sonnets: As when with downcast 



— Brookfield, Rev. W. H., To . 

— But were I loved 

— coquette, To a 

— Could I outwear my present 

state 

— Hugo, Victor, To . 

— Invasion of Poland . 

— Macready, Wm. Charles, To 

— Mine be the strength of spirit. 

— Montenegro .... 

— My hope and heart is with thee 

— O Beauty, passing beauty . 

— Polish Insurrection, On the 

— Prefatory to " Nineteenth Cent- 

ury " 

— Shall the hag Evil die . 

— The pallid thunder-stricken sigh 

— Though night hath climbed her 

peak 

Sorrow, Love and 
Spiteful Letter, On a 

Spring 

Supposed Confessions . 
Swainston, In the Garden at . 
Talking Oak, The .... 
Tears, Idle Tears .... 
Tears of Heaven, The . 
Tennyson, Alfred— my grandson 
Third of February, 1852 . 
Though Night hath climbed her 

peak 

Three sonnets to a coquette 
Timbuctoo .... 

Tithonus 

To E. L. on his Travels in Greece 

— J. S 

Two Voices, The .... 



615 
115 
106 
114 



481 
720 

477 



471 
721 

481 
485 
476 
721 
22 
477 
481 

720 
471 
472 

471 

470 



143 

470 
684 



Valley of Cauteretz, In the . . 386 
Victim, The . .442 

Village Wife, The; or, The Entail 701 

Virgil, To 729 

Vision of Sin, The . . . .115 
Vivien— an idyl . . * .287 
Voice and the Peak . . . 536 
Voyage, The .... 385 
Voyage of Maeldune . . . 715 

Wages 443 

Walking to the Mail ... 73 
War, The 488 

— Song, English . . . .473 

We are free 474 

Welcome to Alexandra . . . 388 

— to Duke of Edinburgh . . 535 
Wellington, Ode on Death of . 248 
What time I wasted youthful 

hours 484 

When? 492 

Where is the Giant of the Sun? . 483 



Tennyson 
That 



508 



Will 252 

— Waterproof's Lyrical Mono- 
logue 108 



Window, The . 
Winnie and Minnie 
Winter 



490 



Tennyson, Alfred. Break, break, break 

Grief's neglect - - 

Lotus, The -.-'-■.-- 

May queen, The - - - - . 

New-year, The - 

Old home, The -■--.- 

Princess, The — an extract 



Fav. 

Flo. 

Flo. 
Fav. 

Flo. 
Fav. 
Fav. 



Eed anemone - Flo. 

King out, wild bells -■--_- Fav. 

Song — A spirit haunts --.'.-- Flo. 

To my grandson - . Ten. 

— Sonnet to. (Wapentake.) - Lon. 

Tent on the beach, The Whi. 

Tent-pole, The - - - - - - P. of F. 

Teos gave to Greece her treasure - Moore 

Tercentenary of Shakespeare - Hoi. 

Teresa, ah, Teresita ! - - - - - Bro. 

Terminus -------- Erne. 

Terpsichore. (Tears of the Muses.) - - Spe. 

— an after-dinner poem Hoi. 

Terra di Lavoro ------ Lou. 

— incognita -,-■*.-.-''-?- Mer. 
Terrace of the Aigalades, On the - - - Lon. 
Terrestrial paradise, The - - - - - Lon. 
Tertsky, Count, c. in The Piccolomini - - Col. 
Test of the poet is knowledge of love - - Erne. 

— The -------- Erne. 

Tester, I'll have in pouch ----- Sha. 

Testimony of divine adoption. (Mme. Guyon.) Cow. 
Tetchy and wayward was thy - Sha. 

Texas — Voice of New England - Whi. 

Textore catharo, De Her. 

Thaisa, c. in Pericles ----- gha. 
Thalia. (Tears of the Muses.) - Spe. 

Thaliard, c. in Pericles ----- Sha. 
Than old George Fletcher, on the British coast Cra. 
Thanatopsis - - - - - - - - Bry. 

— Extract from. (Bryant.) - - - - Fav. 
Thanatos. (Death.) ----- White 

Thangbrand the priest Lon. 

Thank God, bless God, all ye who suffer not Bro. 

— God for the rest, where none molest - Whi. 

— God for the token ! -"-.-'-'.- Whi. 

— God you are rid of a knave - - - Sha. 

— heaven fasting for a good man's love - - Sha. 

— heaven ! the crisis, the danger is past - Poe 
Thankful, The P. of F. 



405 
502 
176 
273 
332 

63 
150 
130 
403 
471 
685 
385 
294 
114 

63 
270 
623 
216 
585 

64 
360 
214 
390 

18 
407 
243 
189 

45 
625 
583 

66 
567 
977 
583 
977 
198 

21 
244 
266 
253 

83 
317 

52 
122 
220 
101 



509 



Tennyson 
That 



Thankfulness - - - - _ .- - - Pro. 162 

Thankless for favors from on high - - - Cow. 444 

Thanks be to God alone »-■--- Wes. 128 

— dear ! Put the lamp down — so - - - Mer. 430 

— for thy gift of ocean flowers - - - Whi. 151 

— for the lessons of this spot - Wor. 406 

— my lord, for your venison - Gol. 110 

— said the judge ; a sweeter draught - - Whi. 205 

— to my redeeming Lord !-.-•-- Wes. 270 

— to the human heart by which we live - - Wor. 500 

— to the mornirg light ----- Erne. 23 
Thanksgiving after childbirth — a sonnet - Wor. 377 

— for disappointments ----- Wes. 46 

— for naval victory, On a .... Burns 187 

— ode - - Wor. 288 

— The - - Her. 116 

That a sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering Ten. 91 

— age was older once than now - - - Hoi. 165 

— all men would be cowards if they dare - Cra. 1 

— Arabs through the realms of space - - Goe. 363 

— book in many eyes doth - Sha. 716 

— book is good which puts me -..--- Erne. 274 

— but this blow might be the be-all - - - Sha. 792 

— change which never changes ! - - L. of A. 120 

— chariot in my life's short d&y - - - Wes. 276 

— darksome cave they enter - - - - Spe. 84 

— day -------- Bro. 144 

— day of wrath, that dreadful day - - - Scott 41 

— each should in his house abide - - - Erne. 299 

— envious sect and most confined - - - Wes. 185 

— form of maiden loveliness - Scott 255 

— god forbid that made me first your slave Sha. 1035 

— happy gleam of vernal eyes - Wor. 452 

— heresies should strike (if truth be scanned Wor. 356 

— I were a glove upon that hand - - - Sha. 719 

— in the captain's but a - Sha. 74 

— is work of waste and ruin - - - Wor. 79 

— it should come to this ... - Sha. 814 

— lamp thou fill'st in Eros' name - - - Eos. 270 

— love is false which clings to love - L. of A. 76 

— man that hath a tongue --"-.- Sha. 31 

— Mantuan poet's incompared spirit - - Spe. 27 

— matter of the murder is hushed up - - She. 268 

— men should put an enemy - Sha. 891 

— mercy I to others show - Pope 222 

— never set a squadron in the field - - Sha. 879 

— no compunctious visitings of nature - - Sha. 791 

— no Italian priest shall tithe - - - Sha, 341 

— not in fancy's maze he wandered long - Pope 274 

— ocean you have late surveyed - - - Cow. 396 



That K-i() 

The OLV 

That one may smile, and smile, and be a villain Sha. 818 

— orbed maiden with white fire laden - She. 427 

— sky of clouds is not the sky - - - Moore 136 

— something still which prompts the eternal Pope 210 

— sorrow can beautify only the heart - - Mer. 35 

— story which the bold Sir Bevidere - - Ten. 433 

— Suleika's love was strong - Goe. 372 

— summons thee to heaven or to hell - - Sha. 793 

— sun which erst with love my bosom - Dante 249 

— there is falsehood in his looks - - - Burns 183 

— thou art blamed shall not be thy defect - Sha. 1037 

— thou canst never end doth make - - Goe. 365 

— thou hast her, it is not all my grief - - Sha. 1033 

— thou mayst injure no man, dovelike be - Cow. 610 

— thy stock may never cease - - - - Wes. 275 

— time is dead forever ----- She. 409 

— time of year thou mayst in me behold - Sha. 1037 

— to us ye praise may render - - - Faust 184 

— very law which molds a tear - - - Rog. 239 

— virtue only makes our bliss below - - Pope 220 

— was a joyous day in Reims of old - - Hem. 184 

— was laid on with a trowel - - - - Sha. 207 

— way look, my infant, lo ! - - - - Wor. 157 

— which Grecian art created - Sch. 229 

— which is now a horse ----- Sha. 936 

— which ordinary men are fit for - - Sha. 852 

— which was good doth pass to better — best L. of A. 148 

— which we call a rose by any other - - Sha. 720 

— woman, in her deepest degradation - - Lon. 45 

— wretch queen, Adonis bewailing - - Flo. 129 

— wrinkle, when first I espied it Moore 175 

— you are fair or wise is vain - - - Erne. 32 

— you were once unkind befriends me now - Sha. 1042 
That's a perilous shot ----- Sha. 456 

— right, friend — drive the gaitlings - - Scott 445 

— the eftest way ------ Sha. 128 

The age has grown so picked - - - - Sha. 841 

— age is dull and mean. Men creep - - Whi. 200 

— air bites shrewdly ------ Sha. 816 

— air is dark with cloud on cloud - - Bry. 332 

— air is full of farewells to the dying - - Lon. 129 

— air is perfumed with the - - - - Sch. 44 

— angel ended and Adam's ear ... Mil. 174 

— angel of the flowers one day - - - Flo. 105 

— angels are at home in heaven - - - Wes. 278 

— angels in the heavens of gladness reap L. of A. 147 

— antique babel, empress of the east - - Spe. 703 

— April winds are magical - Erne. 219 

— Asmodean feat is mine ----- Erne. 277 

— Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold Byron 195 



511 

The atom displaces all atoms beside 

— astrologers did all alike presage 

— attempt and not the deed 

— Autumn is old ------ 

— autumn skies are flushed with gold - 

— autumn-time has come - 

— autumnal glories all have passed away 

— awful shadow of some unseen power 

— babe is at peace — a fragment 

— babe may cease to think that it can play 

— baby figure of the giant mass 

— bairns gat out wi' an unco shout 

— banker's dinner is the stateliest feast - 

— banners of hell's monarch do come forth 

— baptist might have been ordained to cry 

— bard, if e'er he feel at all - 

— bard who first adorned our native tongue 

— bard — whose soul is meek - - - - 

— bards sublime whose distant footsteps 

— barge she sat in, like a burnished throne 

— bark that held a prince went down 

— baron of Smaylho' me rose with day 

— basset-table spread, the tallier come - 

— battle is fought and won - - - - 

— beam of morning trembling - 

— beams of April, ere it goes 

— beaver cut his timber - - - 

— bed of flowers loosens amain - - 

— bell strikes one ; we take no note of time 

— Benedictine Echard ----- 

— best in this kind are but shadows 

— best laid schemes o' mice and men 

— billows on the beach are leaping - 

— billows swell, the winds are high - 

— bird let loose in eastern skies 

— birds against the April wind - - - 

— birds put off their every hue 

— bitter past, how welcome is the sweet - 

— black-hearted eagle - 

— blast from freedom's northern hills 

— blast of common censure could I fear- 

— blessed damozel leaned out - 

— blessings God on man bestows - 

— blind world stumbleth on its round of - 1 

— bliss of walking daily in life's prime - 

— blood more stirs to rouse a lion 

— blue-red rose at vule may blaw - 

— blue waves of Erin roll in light 

— boast of heraldry, the pomp of power 

— boats are out, and the storm is high 





The 


- Erne. 


275 


Cow. 


516 


- Sha. 


793 


Hood 


159 


- Hood 


147 


Whi. 


351 


- Flo. 


275 


She. 


399 


- She. 


508 


Moore 


401 


- Sha. 


629 


Burns 


244 


- Hoi. 


111 


Dante 


117 


- Wor. 


318 


Cow. 


475 


- Dry. 


321 


Wor. 


286 


- Lon. 


87 


Sha. 


919 


- Hem. 


137 


Scott 


346 


- Pope 


363 


Lon. 


309 


Moore 


653 


Cow. 


605 


- Whi. 


270 


Goe. 


71 


- Fav. 


311 


Whi. 


399 


• Sha. 


178 


Burns 


45 


■ She. 


408 


Cow. 


76 


Moore 


341 


Whi. 


315 


- Cow. 


456 


Sha. 


280 


Burns 


181 


Whi. 


62 


■ Dry. 


273 


Ros. 


11 


- Wes. 


247 


,. of A. 


42 


-Wor. 


586 


Sha. 


386 


Burns 


216 


Oss. 


399 


- Fav. 


31 


Pro. 


391 



The 512 

The bond that links our souls together - - Pro. Ill 

— bonnie, bonnie bairn ----- Fav. 347 

— bonniest lad that e er I saw - - - Burns 274 

— bonny brucket lassie ----- Burns 310 

— book "of the wicked is in Sij jin - P. of F. 95 

— book thou givest, dear as such - - - Bro. 290 

— bookful blockhead ignorantly read - - Pope 57 

— bowers whereat, in dreams, I see - - Poe 165 

— boy hath sold him a bargain ... Sha. 142 

— boy stood on the burning deck - - Hem. 348 

— boy's my very image ! - - - - - Sch. 322 

— brave Geraint, a knight of Arthur's court Ten. 254 

— brave Roland ! the brave Roland ! - - Cam. 189 

— breaking waves dashed high - - - Hem. 416 

— breath of spring-time at this twilight hour Bry. 325 

— breeze blew fair, the waving sea - - Fav. 263 

— breeze which swept away the smoke - - Scott 56 

— bricks are alive at this day - - - Sha. 517 

— bright hours return, and the blue sky is - Hem. 243 

— brilliant black eye ----- Moore 647 

— brooklet came from the mountain - - Lon. 230 

— brownie sits in the Scotchman's room - Whi. 124 

— budget — quite charming and witty - Moore 620 

— bull, the fleece are crammed - - - Ten. 72 

— burly driver at my side - Whi. 140 

— bygone wrongs bring forth sorrows and L. of A. 151 

— Caliph ordered up his cook - Hoi. 289 

— cannon's brazen lips are cold - - - Whi. 145 

— captive bird was go ae;— to cliff or moor - Wor. 404 

— castle crag of Drachenfels - - - Bry. 308 

— Catrine woods were yellow seen - - Burns 197 

— cattle crowding round this beverage clear Wor. 398 

— ceaseless raia is falling fast - Lon. 359 

— chain I gave was fair to view - - - Byron 253 

— champions had come from their fields of war Hem. 386 

— changing guests, each in a different mood Ros. 258 

— chapter of Al-Ha jar; There is naught P. of F. 186 

— ' ' chapter of the cattle ; " Heaven is whose P. of F. 42 

— chapter of the "Inevitable" - - - P. of F. 88 

— charge of the gallant three hundred - Ten. 728 

— chariest maid is prodigal enough - - Sha. 815 

— chase is over - - - - - - Oss. 203 

— chestnuts shine through the cloven rind - Fav. 107 

— Chian painter when he was required - Spe. 28 

— child whom, struggling into light - - Wes. 261 

— choice and master spirits of this age - Sha. 775 

— chord, the harp's full chord is hushed - Hem. 366 

— chords, the sacred chords of gold - - Mac. 191 

— circle is broken, — one seat is forsaken - Whi. 135 

— citron-groves their fruits and flowers - Hem. 123 



513 



The 



The clock has struck noon ... - Hoi. 

— clocks are calling three ... - Mer. 

— clouds are blackening, the storms threatening Col. 

— clouds are fleeting by, father - - - Pro. 

— clouds fast gather - - - - - Sen. 

— clouds, which rise with thunder, slake - Whi. 

— cock is crowing, the stream is flowing - Wor. 

— cold earth slept below ----- She. 

— collier has a dochter, and, oh, she's wonder Burns 

— color from the flower is gone - - - Flo. 

— comeliness of unenfeebled age - - - Wor. 

— comet ! He is on his way - Hoi. 

— conference meeting through at last - - Fav. 

— cook of Londone, while the Eeeve spak - Cha. 

— cooper o' Cuddie cam here awa' - - Burns 

— cordage creaks and rattles in the wind - Low. 

— corn in golden light ----- Hem. 

— country ever has a lagging spring - - Bry. 

— course of human life is changeful still - Scott 

— course of my long life hath reached at last Lon. 

— course of true love never did run smooth Sha. 

— cowslip, that bending ----- Flo. 

— cowslips tall her pensioners be - - - Flo. 

— crescent-moon, the star of love - - - Wor. 

— cross, if rightly borne shall be - - - Whi. 

— cuckoo-throb the heart beat of the spring - Ros. 

— curfew tolls the knell of parting day - Fav. 

— curious, choice, clove July flower - - Flo. 

— curse of Adam, the old curse of all - - Hood 

— curtain of the universe ----- She. 

— curtain rose ; in thunders long - - - Hoi. 

— cypress stood up like a church - - - Bro. 

— daintiest last, to make the end most sweet Sha. 

— daisy, by the shadow that it casts - - Wor. 

— dam breaks down, the ice-plain growls - G-oe. 

— dandelions and buttercups - Low. 

— Danish conqueror, on his royal chair - Wor. 

— dark eye has left us Whi. 

— darkness which hung upon Willumberg s Moore 

— dawning of morn, the daylight's sinking Moore 

— day had been a day of wind and storm - Bry. 

— day is closing dark and cold - - - Whi. 

— day is cold, and dark, and dreary - - Lon. 

— day is dark and the night - Ros. 



— day is done and the 



Lon. 87 ; Poe 31 ; Fav 



day is ending - - - - - - Lon. 

- day is gone, and all its sweets are gone ! - Keats 

- day of tumult, strife, defeat - Mac. 

- day returns, my bosom burns - - - Burns 

- daylight is gone— but ! before we depart Moore 

33 



209 

225 
469 
185 
112 
151 
174 
397 
307 

40 
679 
9 
438 
124 
275 

56 
141 
103 
444 
393 
162 

29 

26 
395 
166 
258 

30 
168 
167 
470 
105 
598 
359 
458 
107 
339 
424 

25 

92 
266 

66 
142 

37 
291 
223 

87 
248 
199 
212 
143 



The 514 

The days are cold, the nights are long - - Wor. 112 

— day's sharp strife is ended now - - - Whi. 351 

— dead are in their silent graves - - - Hood 158 

— dead are very many and the living few L. of A. 90 

— dead has risen here, to live through - Sch. 313 

— deadliest snakes are those which twined - Scott 453 

— death-bell beats ! the mountain repeats - She. 555 

— debt immense of endless gratitude - - Mil. 85 

— debt is paid, the verdict said - - - Erne. 221 

— deep affections of the breast - Cam. 305 

— deep of night is crept upon our talk - Sha. 782 

— deil came fiddling through the town - Burns 234 

— desire of the moth for the star - - - She. 441 

— devil can cite Scripture to his purpose - Sha. 184 

— devil got notice that Grose was a-dying - Burns 180 

— devil hath not in all his quiver's choice Byron 489 

— devil hath power to a,ssume - Sha. 825 

— devil, I safely can aver ----- She. 306 

— devil now knew his proper cue - - She. 313 

— dew is on the lotus ! — rise, great Sun - L. of A. 164 

— dew was falling fast, the stars began to blink Wor. 86 

— dew-drop and the star shine sisterly - L. of A. 118 

— dew-drop slips into the shining sea ! - L. of A. 153, 164 

— dinner-bell, the dinner-bell - HOl. 84 

— dirge is played, the throbbing death-peal Hoi. 232 

— discipline of slavery is unknown - - - Wor. 701 

— dome of thought, the palace of the soul - Byron 291 

— doors are all wide open ; at the gate - - Lon. 365 

— doubt which ye misdeem, fair love, is vain Spe. 698 

— dreadful hour with leaden pace approached Tho. 377 

— dreary intercourse of daily life - - Wor. 189 

— Druid Urien had daughters seven - - Scott 327 

— drum gives the signal ! Goe. 406 

— drying up of a single tear - - - Byron 420 

— dwelling of this faithful pair - Wor. 462 

— eagle fond her charge awakes - - - Wes. 256 

— eagle suffers little birds to sing - - Sha. 706 

— earth hath bubbles as the water has - - Sha. 789 

— earth is old, six thousand winters - - Bro. 59 

— earth is so bleak and deserted - - - Pro. 381 

— earth may ring from shore to shore - Bry. 193 

— earth was sown with early flowers - : Bry. 148 

— eastward rocks of Almeria's bay - - Eliot 343 

— elder folks shook hands at last - - - Whi. 334 

— elements respect their Maker's seal - - She. 557 

— embowering rose, the acacia • Wor. 465 

— encircling ground, in native turf arrayed Wor. 380 

— end crowns all ------ Sha. 646 

— end has come, as come it must - - - Whi. 416 

— enormous faith of many made for one - Pope 208 



515 The 

The eternal landscape of the past - - - Ten. 191 

— evening came ; the golden vane - - - Lon. 292 

— evening star will twinkle presently - - Wil. 290 

— ever-changing moon had traced - - - Wor. 464 

— everlasting universe of things - - - She. 400 

— evil days have come ----- Whi. 168 

— evil that men do lives after them - - Sha. 777 

— expense of spirit in a waste of shame - - Sha. 1043 

— face of all the world is changed - - Bro. 154 

— face which duly as the sun - Bro. 605 

— fagots blazed, the caldron's smoke - - Whi. 373 

— fair Pomona nourished in his reign - - Pope 439 

— fair, the chaste, the unexpressive - - Sha. 215 

— fairest, brightest hues of ether fade - - "Wor. 227 

— famed Italian muse, whose rhymes advance Dry. 493 

— famous warriors of the antique world - Spe. 699 

— fashion wears out more apparel - - - Sha. 123 

— Father greater than the Son - ■ - - Wes. 227 

— father's name ye ne'er shall - Goe. 118 

— fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars - Sha. 766 

— fear o' hell's a hangman's whip - - Burns 164 

— feast is o'er ! Now brimming wine - - Fav. 309 

— feast of reason and the flow of soul - - Pope 281 

— feast was over in Branksome tower - - Scott 8 

— feast was spread through England - - Pro. 145 

— feeble sea-birds, blinded in the storms - Hoi. 45 

— festal day hail ye ----- Goe. 150 

— fettered spirits linger- - Pro. 323 

— feudal keep, the bastions of Cohorn - - Wor. 402 

— fields were green, the hills were gray - Burns 302 

— fields which with covetous spirit we sold - Wor. 110 

— fierce beasts of the woods— a fragment - She. 503 

— fiery mountains answer each other - - She. 433 

— fight was o'er — a fragment - - - She. 501 

— fire is burning clear and blithely - - - Low. 362 

— fire seven times tried this - Sha. 191 

— fires grew pale on Rome's deserted shrines Hem. 283 

— firmament breaks up. In black eclipse - Whi. 261 

— first he formed the immense and solid shield Iliad 389 

— first stocke father of gentilnes - - Cha. 602 

— first time that the sun rose on thine oath - Bro. 161 

— fitful alternations of the rain — a fragment She. 505 

— flags of war like storm-birds fly - - - Whi. 265 

— fleet astronomer can bore - - - - Her. 173 

— nightly purpose never is o'ertook - - Sha. 802 

— flood of passion storms with fruitless - Goe. 371 

— floods are roused and will not soon - - Wor. 408 

— flower that smiles to-day - She. 439 

— flowers so carefully reared - Goe. 150 

— foaming stream from out the rock - - Sch. 217 



The 516 

The folds of her wine-dark violet dress - - Mer. 216 

— folks that on the first of May - - - Hoi. 84 

— foremost man of all this world - - - Sha. 781 

— forest huge of ancient Caledon - - - Wor. 388 

— forest of G-lenmore is drear - Scott 374 

— formed world relaxes her cold chain - Wor. 444 

— forward violet thus did I chide Sha. 1040 ; Flo. 384 

— fount the Spaniard sought in vain - - Hoi. 289 

— fountain in its source ----- Cow. 624 

— fountains mingle with the river She. 419 ; Fav. 256 

— fourteen centuries fall away - - - Whi. 234 

— fox-glove leaves, with caution given - Flo. 169 
— • freeman casting with unpurchased hand - Hoi. 14 

— fresh savannas of the Sangamon - - Bry. 196 

— friend whom wild from wisdom's way Burns 181 

— friends that are and friends that were - Hoi. 215 

— fringed curtain of thine eye - Sha. 5 

— frolic architecture of the snow - - - Erne. 42 

— frost is here, and fuel is dear - - - Ten. 490 

— frost performs its secret ministry - - Col. 182 

— fur that warms a monarch, warmed a bear Pope 203 

— future cannot contradict the past - - Wor. 657 

— future's great veil our breath fitfully flaps Mer. 50 

— gallant youth who may have gained - - Wor. 383 

— gale that wrecked you on the hand - - Erne. 240 

— game is up - - - - - - Sha. 958 

— garlands fade that spring so lately wore Flo. 456 

— gates of heaven unfold ! Jove summons all Vir. 338 

— gaudy, babbling and remorseful - - Sha. 515 

— gayest hours trip lightly by - - - - Fav. 21 

— genius of the Augustan age - - - Cow. 438 

— gentle shepherd sat beside a spring - - Spe. 562 

— gentleman is not in your books - - Sha. Ill 

— gentleness of rain was in the wind - - She. 507 

— gentlest poet with free thoughts endowed Wor. 209 

— gentlest shade that walked Elysian plains Wor. 252 

— ghost of Miltiades came at night - - Moore 639 

— gifts of heaven my following song pursues Vir. 105 

— glass of fashion and the mold of form - Sha. 826 

— gloom that breathes upon me - - - Eos. 260 

— gloomy night is gathering fast - - Burns 203 

— glorious image of the Maker's beauty - Spe. 697 

— glorious portrait of that angel's face - - Spe. 690 

— glory, jest and riddle of the world - - Pope 194 

— goblet is sparkling Sch. 118 

— god looked out upon the troubled deep - Hoi. 320 

— god of love — ah, benedicite - Wor. 474 

— god of love, and benedicite - - - Cha. 571 

— God of love my shepherd is - - - - Her. 274 

— god of my idolatry Sha. 720 



517 The 

The gods are just and of our - Sha. 877 

— golden apple, the golden apple - - - Ten. 478 

— golden gates of sleep unbar - She. 442 

— golden haired Bacchus did espouse - - Bro. 176 

— golden planet of the Occident - - - Mer. 186 

— good are better made by ill - Rog. 228 

— good in man is not his own - Wes. 268 

— goodman sat beside his door - - - Whi. 37 

— grapes upon the vicar's wall - - - Col. 185 

— gray-beard, old wisdom, may boast - - Burns 183 

— great ones eat up the little ones - - - Sha. 982 

— Grecian wits, who satire first began - Dry, 281 

— green grass is bowing ----- Erne. 86 

— green leaves as we pass - Wil. 303 

— greenhouse is my summer seat - - - Cow. 430 

— groves were God's first temples Bry. 79 ; Fav. 38 

— guests were loud, the ale was strong - - Lon. 250 

— gypsies came to our lord's gate - - Burns 323 

— hall of Cynddylan is gloomy to-night - - Hem. 242 

— hall of harps is lone to night - - - Hem. 250 

— hand of Douglas is his own - - - - Scott 99 

— hand of little employment - - - Sha. 840 

— happiness that man whilst prisoned here - Goe. 206 

— happy day at length arrived - - - Moore 85 

— harbingers are come. See, see their mark Her. 279 

— hardy warriors whom Boeotia bred - - Iliad 85 

— harp at nature's advent strung - - - Whi. 313 

— harp that once through Tara's halls - Moore 215 

— harp the monarch minstrel swept - Byron 190 

— harvest of a quiet eye ----- Wor. 416 

— head and hands of murdered Cicero - Ros. 297 

— head is not more native to the heart - - Sha. 813 

— heart of it is love, the end of it - L. of A. 151 

— heart, the heart is a heritage - - - Fav. 233 

— heart ache and the thousand natural - Sha. 826 

— hearth, the hearth is desolate ! - - Hem. 367 

— heath this night must be my bed - - Scott 131 

— heathen, Lord ! are come ! " - - - - Dante 237 

— heather was blooming, the meadows were Burns 290 

— heavens' breath smells wooingly here - Sha. 792 

— heights by great men reached and kept - Lon. 212 

— hero's noble shade stands high - - - Goe. 60 

— herring loves the merry-moonlight - - Scott 403 

— hidden good it pays with peace and bliss L. of A. 150 

— hills all glowed with a festive light - - Hem. 422 

— hills rock-ribbed and ancient as the sun - Bry. 22 

— hind that would be mated by the lion - Sha. 255 

— history of human kind to trace - - Hood 407 

— holiest of all holidays are those - - - Lon. 385 
— hollow dash of waves ! the ceaseless roar ! Hem. 413 



The 



518 



The holly! the holly! oh, twine it with bay - Flo. 

— honest man, though e'er sae poor - - Fav. 

— hoop, the darling justly of the fair - - Tho. 

— hope of all who suffer - - Whi. 

— hope of truth grows stronger, day by day - Low. 

— host is now gone forth : to fly - - - Wes. 

— hour of Hesperus ! the hour when feeling - Mer. 

— hour was late ; the fire burned low - - Lon. 
■ — hour was one of mystery - Mer. 

— hour which might have been yet - - Ros. 

— house was crammed from roof to floor - Hoi. 

— hue, which coward dread on my pale cheeks Dante 

— hungry judges soon the sentence sign - Pope 

— hunting tribes of air and earth - - Scott 

— idea of her life shall ----- Sha. 

— ides of March are come - Sha. 

— image of love that nightly flies - - - Flo. 

— Iman Ali, lion of the faith - - - P. of F. 

— imperial consort of the fairy-king - - Wor. 

— imperial stature, the colossal stride - - Wor. 

— inaudible and noiseless foot of time - - She. 

— influence benign of loving eyes - - Low. 

— iron tongue of midnight - Sha. 

— isles of Greece, the isles of Greece ! - - Byron 

— jasmine throwing wide her elegant sweets Flo. 

— jasmine with which the queen - - - Flo. 

— judge removed, though he's no more my lord Dry. 

— jury passing on the prisoner's life - 

— kaiser feasted in his hall 



— keen stars were twinkling - 

— key of this infernal pit by due - 

— king then blew his horn on high 

— king told G-yges of the purple flower 

— king was on his throne 

— king's English - - - - 

— king's most humble servant, I - 



Sha. 

- Hem. 

- She. 

- Mil. 

- Scott 

- Flo. 

- Byron 

- Sha. 

- Burns 



— king's three daughters stood on the terrace Pro. 

— kings of old have shrine and tomb - - Hem. 

— kirk of Ulpha to the pilgrim's eye - - Wor. 

— kiss, dear maid ! thy lip has left - - Byron 

— kiss that would make a maid's cheek flush Cam. 

— knight had ridden doun from Wensley moor Wor. 

— labor we delight in physics pain - - - Sha. 

— laddies by the banks o' Nith - - - Burns 

— lady lay in her bed ----- Hood 

— lady protests too much - Sha. 

— lady thus addressed her spouse - - - Cow. 

— lake is calm ; and, calm, the skies - - Mer. 

— lamp must be replenished - - - Byron 

— lamp of May, with ill-presaging glare Burns 



204 
123 
395 
315 

22 
254 
188 
271 
260 
254 
245 

28 

72 
195 
127 
774 
121 

44 
229 
242 
277 

42 
179 
368 
120 
122 
503 

71 
397 
447 

57 
648 

39 
194 

46 
180 
316 
361 
333 
245 
309 
183 
795 
219 
126 
829 
431 
251 

87 
107 



519 The 

The lamps in the castle hall burn bright - Mer. 275 

— land of sunshine and of song ! - - - Hoi. 153 

— land of uprightness ----- Wes. 258 

— land was pale with famine - - - Whi. 332 

— land we from our fathers had in trust - Wor. 278 

— landlady and Tarn grew gracious - - Burns 131 

— landlord ended thus his tale - - - Lon. 237 

— landlord's laugh was ready chorus - - Burns 131 

— lapse of time and rivers is the same - - Cow. 44 

— lark has sung his carol in the sky - - Eog. 183 

— lass of Patie's mill Burns 300 

— last bridal that I was at - * Burns 269 

— last of all the Romans, fare thee well - - Sha. 786 

— last of our steers on our board has been - Scott 452 

— last tall son of Lot and Bellicent - - - Ten. 492 

— last, the fatal hour is come - - - Cam. 198 

— last time I came o'er the moor - - Burns 252, 299 

— laurel-leaf, which you this day do wear - Spe. 692 

— law of heaven is love ----- Wil. 321 

— lazy mist hangs from the brow of the hill Burns 213 

— leaves of memory seemed to make - - Lon. 12§ 

— leaves that rustled on this oak-crowned hill Wor. 393 

— leaves we knew are gone - Wil. 104 

— leaves were fading when to Esthwaite's - Wor. 535 

— life which lies between, like that arch L. of A. 100 

— lifelong day Lord Marmion rode - - Scott 65 

— light of love, the purity of grace - - Byron 17 

— lights and shadows fly Ten. 489 

— lights are out, and gone are all the guests - Lon. 352 

— lights extinguished, by the hearth I leant Pro. 203 

— lilac, various in array — now white - - Flo. 175 

— lily minds me of a maiden brow - - Flo. 80 

— linnet's warble, sinking toward a clos j - Wor. 392 

— lintwhite and the throstlecock - - - Ten. 465 

— little bird sat on the greenwood tree - - Tay. 130 

— little gate was reached at last - - - Low. 352 

— little hedgerow birds ----- Wor. 486 

— little love-god lying once asleep — a sonnet Sha. 1046 

— livelong day ------- Sha. 764 

— living heaven thy prayers respect - - Erne. 236 

— living record of your memory - - - Sha. 1034 

— loft follower of the sun - Flo. 147 

— longest tyranny that ever swayed - - Dry. 270 

— look that thy sweet eyes on mine impress Goe. 217 

— Lord hath to his servants shown - - - Wes. 245 

— lord o' Gordon had three dochters - - Burns 313 

— lord of life, the lords of life - - - - Erne. 228 

— lord of life walked into the forest one morn Flo. 183 

— Lord proclaims his grace abroad ! - - Cow. 60 

— Lord receives his highest praise - - Cow. 90 



The 520 

The Lord will happiness divine - - - Cow. 57 

— lost days of my life until to-day - - Eos. 269 

— lotus-flower, whose leaves I now - Flo. 176 

— love of all things springs from love of one Low. 22 

— love that deep within me lies - - - Mer. 192 

— love that seeks a home - Moore 227 

— love, which me so cruelly tormenteth - Spe. 694 

— lovely lass of Inverness - - - Burns 259 

— lovely nun (submissive but more meek - Wor. 366 

— lover all as frantic ------ Sha. 176 

— lover in melodious verses - Cow. 608 

— lovers took within this ancient grove - - Wor. 389 

— lunatic, the lover and the poet - - - Sha. 176 

— lyfe so short, the craft so long to learn - Cha. 578 

— malice of thy church's foes - - - Wes. 259 

— man for wisdom's various arts renowned Odys. 7 

— man in life wherever placed - - - Burns 38 

— man of firm and noble soul - - - Byron 133 

— Man of sorrow now ----- Wes. 297 

— man that hath no music ... - Sha. 202 

— man that pays his pence, and goes - - Hood 516 

— man who keeps a conscience pure - Moore 330 

— maples redden in the sun - Bry.. 244 

— march of mind upon its mighty stilts - Hood 594 

— marten flew to the finch's nest - Ing. 512 

— martial courage of a day is vain — a sonnet Wor. 279 

— mason's trade resembles life - - - Goe. 246 

— massy ways, carried across these heights - Wor. 468 

— master, the swabber ----- Sha. 10 

— May sun sheds an amber light - Bry. 218 

— meanest then may mercy claim - - Wes. 285 

— meeting points the sacred hair dissever - Pope 75 

— melancholy days are come - Bry. 92 ; Fav. 188 

— melody of distant chimes - Hem. 347 

— men who slight Thy faithful word - Wes. 164 

— merry cuckoo, messenger of spring - - Spe. 690 

— merry world did on a day - - - Her. 202 

— mighty Jephthah led his warriors on - - Wil. 21 

— mighty mother, and her son, who brings Pope 122 

— mighty spirit, and its power, which stains Cra. 517 

— minister and the novice into vices - - Cha. 329 

— minstrel-boy to the war is gone - - Moore 244 

— minstrel came once more to view - - Scott 155 

— minstrels played their Christmas tune - Wor. 326 

— mist and the rain ! Ten. 491 

— mist is fast clearing ----- Goe. 225 

— mist still hovers round the distant hills - Flo. 397 

— monk must arise when the matins ring - Scott 419 

— monk was preaching, strong his earnest Pro. 431 

— moon had climbed the highest hill - Burns 305 



521 



The 



The moon has set : while yet the dawn - Whi. 160 

— moon is at her full, and, riding high - - Bry. 252 

— moon is bleached as white as wool - - Ing. 268 

— moon is in her summer glow - Scott 180 

— moon of Mahomet - - ... She. 379 

— moon shines white and silent - - - Low. 15 

— moon that now is shining - Pro. 396 

— moon was shining yet ----- Wil. 61 

— moon — who does not love the silver moon Hood 263 

— moonbeam, quivering o'er the wave - - Hem. 272 

— moon's on the lake and the mist's on the Scott 402 

— Moor had beleaguered Valencia's towers Hem. 254 

— Moor is on his way Hem. 475 

— more I've viewed this world - - - Moore 602 

— more we live, more brief appear - - - Cam. 240 

— morn arrived ; his footstep quickly - - Goe. 17 

— morn hath risen clear and calm - - Moore 433 

— morning brightness showereth down - Flo. 433 

— morning broke. Light stole - - - Wil. 7 

— morning sun's enchanting rays - - White 13 

— mossy marbles rest ----- Hoi. 1 

— most alluring clouds that mount the sky Wor. 247 

— most patient man in loss - Sha. 952 

— most senseless and fit man - Sha. 122 

— most unkindest cut of all - - - - Sha. 778 

— mother will not turn Eos. 250 

— mountain and the squirrel - - - Erne. 71 

— mountain summits sleep - Cam. 126 

— mountain utters the same sense - - Erne. 282 

— mountain village was destroyed - - - Goe. 240 

— mountains glitter in the snow - - - Hoi. 137 

— mournful muse of two despairing swains - Vir. 42 

— mouse that always trusts to one poor hole Pope 492 

— muse, disgusted at an age and clime - - Fav. 427 

— muse of boyhood's fervid hour - - - Hoi. 236 

— muse's hill by fear is guarded - - - Erne. 277 

— music of the weakened lyre - Wil. 275 

— naiad-like lily of the vale ... - Flo. 72 

— name of Wirtemberger they hold - - Sch. 321 

— native grandeur of the human soul - - Wor. 669 

— natural thirst, ne'er quenched but from the Dante 193 

— new born child of gospel grace - - - Cow. 89 

— news has flown frae mouth to mouth - Scott 440 

— night her silent sables wore - - - Burns 313 

— night is come, but not too soon - - Lon. 3 

— night is dark, the stinging sleet - - - Low. 14 

— night it was still, and the moon it shone White 295 

— night wind shook the tapestry around - Hem. 188 

— night wind with a desolate moan Wil. 211 ; Fav. 153 

— night winds howled, the billows dashed - Bry. 139 



The 



522 



The night's in November ; the winds are at strife Mer. 255 

— noble Maxwells and their powers - Burns 239 

— noblest mind the best contentment has - Spe. 34 

— noon of summer shed its ray - - - Hoi. 148 

— noon was shady and soft airs - - - Cow. 455 

— north- wind fall'n in the new-starred night Ten. 478 
■ — nymph must lose her female friend - Cow. 434 

— observed of all observers ---.-. Sha. 826 

— ocean to the river of his thoughts - - Byron 203 

— odor from the flower is gone - - - She. 410 

— old chief, feeling now wellnigh his end - Low. 54 

— old house by the lindens - Lon. 132 

— old inventive poets, had they seen - - Wor. 331 

— old man sat by the chimney side - - - Fav. 313 

— old mayor climbed the belfry tower - Ing. Ill 

— old year is passing away, Maud - - - Fav. 305 

— one who is thy choice of all the world - Wor. 591 

— only one whom, Lida, thou canst love - Goe. 65 

— opening bud that lightly swung - - Flo. 468 

— oppression of the tumult - Wor. 356 

— ordeal's fatal trumpet sounded - - Cam. 194 

— ordered music of the marching orbs - L. of A. 149 

— " Origin of Love " ! — Ah, why - - - Byron 252 

— other two, slight air and purging fire - - Sha. 1033 

— pagan's myths through marble lips are - Whi. 123 

— pages of thy book I read - Low. 41 

— painful smith, with force of fervent heat Spe. 692 

— pains and penalties of idleness - - - Pope 175 

— painter's and the poet's fame - - - Hoi. 263 

— pale and delicate narcissus' flowers - - Flo. 52 

— pale sun through the spectral wood - - Mer. 255 

— pale, the cold and the moony smile - - She. 396 

— pallid thunder-stricken sigh for gain - Ten. 472 

— pansy and the violet here ... - Flo. 42 
— . panther knowing that his spotted hide - Spe. 696 

— panting city cried to the sea - - - Lon. 407 

— partner of our flesh and blood - - - Wes. 228 

— past — the future — all that fate - - Moore 449 

— path we planned beneath October's sky - Bry. 308 

— paths of glory lead but to the grave - - Fav. 31 

— pathway of the sinking moon - - - Fav. 144 

— patient heavenly man thus suppliant pray 'd Odys. 96 

— patient Pan, drunken with nectar - - Erne. 279 

— pawky auld carle came o'er the lea - Burns 328 

— peace which others seek they find - - Wor. 105 

— pensive skeptic of the lonely vale - - Wor. 690 

— pensive snow-drop lifts her modest head - White 228 

— perfect world by Adam trod - - - Wil. 74 

— perfume breathing round like a pervading Moore 381 

— Persian's flowery gifts, the shrine - - Whi. 260 



523 The 

The Phrygian rock that braves the storm - Moore 34 

— pibroch's note — a sonnet - Wor. 384 

— pied windflowers and the tulip tall - - Flo. 47 

— pilgrim and stranger who through the day. 

(E. H. W.) - - - - - - Whi. 398 

— pilgrim of eternity, whose fame - - - She. 371 

— pineapples, in triple row - Cow. 388 

— pines were dark on Raraoth hill - - - Whi. 233 

— pious man in this bad world - - - White 366 

— piping of our slender, peaceful reeds - - Hoi. 87 

— piteous sobs that choke the Virgin's breath Col. 99 

— place is dignified by the doer's deed - - Sha. 262 

— place where to descend the precipice - Dante 38 

— plain was grassy, wild and bare - - - l^en. 18 

— plain with still, and wandering feet - - Goe. 62 

— playful smiles around the dimpled mouth - Pope 368 

— pleasant land displayed before - - - Wes. 253 

— pleasing punishment that women bear - Sha. 93 

— pledge of friendship ! it is still divine - Hoi. 48 

— plowman, he's a bonny lad - - - Burns 216 

— poet dreamt of heaven ... - F a v. 143 

— poet has the child's sight in his breast - Bro. 91 

— poet in a golden clime was born - - - Ten. 16 

— poet's eye in a fine frenzy - - - Sha. 176 

— poor man weeps — here Gavin sleeps - Burns 185 

— poor supply Thy place - Wes. 297 

— pope he was saying the high, high mass - Scott 353 

— pope on Christmas day - Bro. 353 

— poplars are felled ; farewell to the shade - Cow. 439 

— ports of death are sins ; of life, good deeds Fav. 298 

— post-boy drove with fierce career - - Wor. 81 

— power of armies is a visible thing — a sonnet Wor. 282 

— power that dwelleth in sweet sounds to Hem. 416 

— praise of meaner wits this work - - - Spe. 23 

— prayer of Ajax was for light - - - Lon. 39 

— prayers I make will then be sweet indeed - Wor. 231 

— primal duties shine aloft — like-stars - Wor. 700 

— prince of darkness is a gentleman - - Sha. 864 

— principle by which each thing - >- - Sch. 275 

— proper study of mankind is man - - - Pope 194 

— prosperous and beautiful - Erne. 78 

— proud city's gay wealthy train. (Bloom- 

field.) - White 451 

— proudest now is but my peer - Whi. 170 

— purple iris hangs his head - Mer. 445 

— quaker of the olden time [---_- Whi. 98 

— quality of mercy is not strained - - Sha. 198 

— queen in the lofty hall takes her place - Goe. 128 

— quiet August noon has come - - - Bry. 113 

— Rabbi Nathan, two-score years and ten - Whi. 333 



The 



524 



The rage to live which makes all living strife L. of A 

— rain had fallen, the poet arose 

— rain is playing its soft pleasant tune 

— rain it raineth every day 

— rankest compound of villainous smell 
— .remembrance of the good 

— rest is all but leather or prunello - 

— Rhine is running deep and red 

— rich man's son inherits lands - 

— riches of a spotless memory - 
ring is on my hand 



. 22 

Ten. 118 

Wil. 299 

Sha. 303 

Sha. 58 

Goe. 205 

Pope 215 

Ayt. 100 

Low. 15 

Erne. 291 

Poe 106 

— ripest fruit first falls Sha. 363 

— rising moon has hid the stars - - - Lon. 36 

— Hitter Bann from Hungary - Cam. 201 

— river hemmed with leaning trees - - Whi. 389 

— rivers rush into the sea ------ Lon. 22 

— robbed that smiles steals - - - - Sha. 884 

— robins sang in the orchard - Whi. 376 

— rocky ledge runs far into the sea - - Lon. 128 

— rocky nook with hilltops three - - - Erne. 182 

— roll of drums and the bugle's wailing - Whi. 321 

— rolling wheel that runnetn often round - Spe. 690 

— Roman sentinel stood helm'd and tall - Wil. 46 

— rose had been washed, just washed in a - Cow. 419 

— rose I sing sprung from no earthly mold Flo. 313 

— rose is fairest when 'tis budding Scott 134 ; Flo. 97 

— rose is sweetest washed with morning dew Scott 134 

— rose o'er crag or vale ----- Flo. 100 

— rose, that drinks the fountain-dew - - She. 502 

— rose, the flower of love ----- Flo. 95 

— rose was in rich bloom on Sharon's plain Hem. 354 

— roses of love glad the garden of life - Byron 143 

— rude sea gcew civil at her song - - Sha. 165 

— rude wind is singing — a fragment - - She. 507 

— ruling passion, be it what it will - - Pope 246 

— Sabbath bells renew the inviting peal - - Wor. 377 

— sacred muses have made always claim - Spe. 2Q 

— sacred sun, above the waters raised - Odys. 32 

— sad and solemn- night - Bry. 74 

— saffron morn with early blushes Iliad 238 ■ Odys. 72 

— sailor sighs as sinks his native shore - - Rog. 232 

— saint sustained it but the woman died - Pope 345 

— saintly youth has ceased to rule - - - Wor. 369 

— saints should never be dismayed - - Cow. 52 

— same good blood that now refills - - - Low. 96 

— same old baffling questions ! Whi. 170 

— Savior hides his face Cow. 78 

— Savior looked on Peter - - - Bro. 85 

— Savior, what a noble flame - Cow. 70 

— scenes are desert now and bare - - Scott 53 



525 The 

The sculptor? nameless, tho' once dear to fame Cow. 496 

— sea awoke at midnight from its sleep - Lon. 366 

— sea hath its pearls ------ Lon. 93 

— sea is the road of the bold - Erne. 240 

— sea is flowing ever ------ Goe. 368 

— sea is lonely, the sea is dreary - - Low. 2 

— sea is mighty, but a mightier sways - - Bry. 203 

— sea-bird's wing o'er ocean's breast - - Hem. 425 

— sea-king woke from the troubled sleep - Hem. 129 

— season was the childhood of sweet June - She. 468 

— secrets of the silence whence all come L. of A. 100 

— seed that wasteful autumn cast - - Hoi. 126 

— seeing of His eyes should not be told - P. of F. 71 

— sense of the world is short - Erne. 89 

— sentence broke short, like a weapon - - Mer. 41 

— serfs are glad through Lara's wide domains Byron 50 

— selfsame heaven that frowns on me - - Sha. 590 

— sense of death is most in apprehension - Sha. 78 

— seraph sings before the manifest - Bro. 81 

— serpent is shut out from paradise - - She. 440 

— serpent me beguiled and I did eat - - Mil. 227 

— shades for me but over thee - - - Whi. 249 

— shades of night were falling fast - - - Lon. 40 

— shadow of a monarch's crown - - - Bro. 580 

— shadow of her face upon the wall - - Bro. 90 

— shadows lay along Broadway Poe 24 ; Fav. 252 ; Wil. 280 

— shadows of the evening hours - Pro. 335 

— shadows round the inland sea - - - Whi. 139 

— sheep-boy whistled loud, and lo ! - - - Wor. 492 

— Shepherd good indeed thou art - - Wes. 301 

— shepherd looking eastward — a sonnet - Wor. 237 

— shepherd touched his reed ; sweet Philomel Cow. 604 

— shepherd's boy (best known by that name) Spe. 617 

— shepherds went their hasty way - - Col. 201 

— ship of state ! above her skies are blue - Hoi. 315 

— ship went On with solemn face - - - Bro. 109 

— short and the long of it .... sha. 49 

— shroud is yet unspread ... - Bro. Ill 

— silver moon's enamored beam - - Burns 303 

— simple bard, rough at the rustic plow - Burns 96 

— simple goatherd between Alp and sky - Bro. 91 

— sin be on the pride that sells its blood - Wil. 248 

— sins which men at thy command - - Wes. 252 

— skies are painted with unnumbered sparks Sha. 774 

— skies they were ashen and sober - - - Poe 66 

— sky is bright — the breeze is fair - - Moore 659 

— sky is clouded ; and the wood - - I. S. S. 10 

— sky is overcast - Wor. 169 

— sky is ruddy in the east - Whi. 112 

— slaver in the broad lagoon - Lon. 43 



The 526 

The sleepless hours who watch me as I lie - She. 425 

— slings and arrows of outrageous fortune - Sha. 826 

— small birds rejoice in the green leaves Burns 210 

— smallest worm will turn being trodden - Sha. 534 

— smiling spring comes in rejoicing - Burns 241 

— smoke ascends to heaven as lightly - - Wor. 700 

— smoke that from thine altar blows - - G-oe. 241 

— snow had begun in the gloaming - - Low. 336 

— snow-drop is herald of the flowers - - Flo. 19 

— snow-drop ! 'Tis an English flower - - Flo. 20 

— snow-drop, winter's timid child - - - Flo. 24 
— - snow-flakes fall in showers - - - Goe. 68 

— snows that glittered in the disk of Mars - Hoi. 191 

— soaring lark is blest as proud - - - Wor. 449 

— solid, solid universe ----- Erne. 221 

— son of him with whom we strove for power Ten. 535 

— Son of Man supplies ----- Wes. 50 

— song of war shall echo through our - - Moore 653 

— song that lightens the languid way - Moore 298 

— song was one that I had heard - " - - Eog. 31 

— soul lives on. What lives on with the soul? Mer. 179 

— soul of man createth its own destiny - Wil. 98 

— soul of man resembleth water - - - Goe. 165 

— soul of music slumbers in the shell Rog. 194 ; Fav. 304 

— soul secure in her existence - Fav. 145 

— soul uneasy and confined from home - Pope 189 

— soul's calm sunshine and the heartfelt joy - Pope 215 

— soul's east-window of divine surprise - Low. 399 

— soul's Realto hath its merchandise - - Bro. 157 

— souls that Israel leave - Wes. 262 

— sound of Rokeby's woods I hear - Scott 216 

— sound of waves by night - Hem. 347 

— sounding jargon of the schools - - - Cow. 125 

— south-land boasts its teeming cane - - Whi. 150 

— south- wind brings - Erne. 130 

— sovereign beauty which I do admire - Spe. 687 

— spark of life is like a spark of fire - - Fav. 165 

— sparkling eye, the mantling cheek - - Cow. 45 

— spell is broke, the charm is flown ! - Byron 243 

— sphinx is drowsy Erne. 9 

— spider and the dove ! what thing is weak P. of F. 31 

— spider spreads her webs whether she be - She. 341 

— spider's touch, how exquisitely fine ! - - Pope 192 

— spirit breathes upon the word - - - Cow. 71 

— spirit of antiquity Wor. 292 

— spirit of my land - - - - - Hem. 364 

— spirit of soft solitude and prayer - - Byron 254 

— spirits of the prophets came at morn - P. of F. 110 

— splendor falls on castle walls - - - Ten. 142 

— star may but a meteor be - - - - Wil. 273 



527 



The 



The star of the unconquered will - - - Lon. 

— stars are forth, the moon above the tops Fav. 

— stars are gleaming ------ Pro. 

— stars are mansions built by nature's hand Wor. 

— stars are rolling in the sky - Hoi. 

— stars are with the voyager - Hood 

— stars their early vigils keep - - - Hoi. 

— stately homes of England - - - Hem. 

— still, sad music of humanity - Wor. 

— stones in the streamlets I make - - - Goe. 

— stork who worms and frogs devours - Goe. 

— storm is past but it hath left behind it - Lon. 

— storm-wind is howling. (E. H.W.) - Whi. 

— stormy March is come at last - Bry. 53 ; Flo. 

— stranger's heart ! wound it not ! - - Hem. 

— straw-stuffed hamper with his ruthless steel Cow. 

— stream whose plaintive course was Byron 

— stream with languid murmur creeps Col. 40 ; Flo. 

-Wor. 

Sch. 

\ of F. 

Scott 

Hoi. 

Bry. 

- Lon. 
Scott 

- Flo. 
Whi. 
Erne. 
Scott 

- Hoi. 
Flo. 

■ Erne. 

Burns 

■Wor. 

Burns 

Lon. 

Wor. 

• Scott 

Lon. 

She. 

She. 

Hem. 

Erne. 

Hoi. 

Goe. 

Whi. 

Wor. 

Ten. 

Scott 



— struggling rill insensibly is grown 

— sullen mayor who reigns in hell 

— sultan of Damascus found asleep - ] 

— sultry summer day is done 

— summer dawn is breaking - 

— summer morn is bright and fresh - 

— summer sun is sinking low - 

— summer sun, whose early power 

— summer-time has come again 

— summer warmth has left the sky - 

— sun athwart the sky thought it - 

— sun, awakening, through the smoky air - 

— sun-browned girl whose limbs recline 

— sun declines, his parting ray - 

— sun goes down, and with him takes - 

— sun had closed the winter day - 

— sun has long been set - 

— sun he is sunk in the west - 

— sun is bright, — the air is clear 

— sun is couched, the sea-fowl gone to rest 

— sun is rising dimly red - - - - 

— sun is set ; in his latest beams - 

— sun is set : the swallows are asleep 

— sun is warm, the sky is clear - 

— sun sets brightly but a ruddier glow - 

— sun set, but se 1 : noi his hope - 

— sun stepped down from his golden throne 

— sun still chaunts, as in old time 

— sun that brief December day 

— sun, that seemed so mildly to retire 

— sun, the moon, the stars, the seas 

— sun upon the lake is low - 



3 

20 
329 
238 

10 
154 

34 
385 
188 

47 
232 
350 
397 
410 
237 
469 
254 

75 
328 
307 

19 
210 
208 
172 
407 
420 
458 
4S0 
231 
151 

77 

65 
195 

60 
393 
201 

37 
391 
434 
366 
475 
411 
110 
231 

76 
391 
286 
390 
444 
524 



The 



528 



The sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill - - - Scott 411 

— sun was streaming in : I woke, and said Ing. 391 

— sun, whom Grecians Helios call - - - Goe. 376 

— sunbeams but for half a year - - - Hoi. 165 

— sunbeams streak the azure skies - - - Eog. 252 

— sunlight falls on hill and dale - - - Flo. 287 

— sunlight glitters keen and bright - - - Whi. 127 

— suns of eighteen centuries have shone - Whi. 100 

— sunset sheds a horizontal smile - - - Cam. 280 

— surest passions thus from passions shoot Pope 199 

— swallow is not come yet - Mer. 440 

— swallows in their torpid state - - - Cow. 431 

— sweet spring day is glad with music - - Whi. 353 

— sylphs and ondines ----- Mer. 209 

— sylvan slopes with corn-clad fields - - Wor. 427 

— table of my heart prepare - Wes. 253 

— tailor fell through the bed - - - Burns 225 

— tale I tell is gospel true - Hoi. 89 

— tale is done ; it little needs - - - - Hoi. 98 

— tale of the count our glad song - - Goe. 113 

— tall, sallow guardsmen their horsetails - Whi. 258 

— teacher ended, and his high discourse - Dante 182 

— tear down childhood's cheek - - - Fav. 36 

— tears I shed must ever fall. (Cranstoun.) Burns 338 

— tears of man in various measure gush - Wor. 368 

— tedded hay, the first-fruits of the soil - - Col. 160 

— tempest gathers — be it mine to seek - Col. 382 

— tempest rages wild and high - - - Pro. 123 

— tender, delicate flowers - Pro. 156 

— tent-lights glimmer on the land - - - Whi. 268 

— Thames flows proudly to the sea - - Burns 225 

— thief doth think each bush an officer - - Sha. 554 

— thorns which grow upon this rose of life L. of A. 21 

— threads our hands in blindness spin - - Whi. 414 

— three holy kings with stars - - - Goe. 99 

— thronged boughs of the shadowy - - Ros. 303 

— tide rises, the tide falls -.-.-.- Lon. 400 

— time for toil has passed - - Fav. 424 

— time has been when these wild solitudes Bry. 29 

— time I saw thee, Cora, last - - - - Cam. 311 

— time is racked with birth-pangs - - Hoi. 200 

— time I've lost in wooing - - - Moore 251 

— time of gifts has come again - - - Whi. 414 

— tither morn when I forlorn - - - Burns 244 

— tongue is prone to lose the way - - Erne. 290 

— tongues of dying men ----- Sha. 362 

— tower of old saint Nicholas soared - - Low. 60 

— town, the churchyard, and the setting sun Keats 254 

— train from out the castle drew - - - Scott 98 

— train has left the hills of Braid - - - Scott 82 



529 The 

The tree whereon decay all those - - - Sch. 243 

— tribute of enjoyment, knowledge, health - Wor. 700 

— trodden worm will turn again - - - Wes. 294 

— troop will be impatient ; let us hie - - Wor. 43 

— troubadour o'er many a plain - - - Hem. 117 

— true beginning of our end - Sha. 177 

— trumpet's voice has roused the Hem. 357 ; Fav. 100 

— tulip called the eglantine ---■_._ Flo. 462 

— tune that speaks of other times - - Hem. 347 

— turbaned race are poured in thickening - Wor. 361 

— turf shall be my fragrant shrine - - Moore 342 

— twentieth year is well nigh past - - - Cow. 504 

— twilight is sad and cloudy - - - Lon. 126 

— two proud sisters of the sea - Hoi. 86 

— unambiguous footsteps of the God - - Cow. 339 

— undiscovered country from whose bourn - Sha, 826 

— unhappy man who once has trailed a pen Dry. 490 

— universe, O God, is home - Fav. 430 

— valiant never taste of death but once - Sha. 772 

— valley lay smiling before me - - Moore 244 

— valley rings with mirth and joy - - Wor. 83 

— varied earth, the moving heaven - - Ten. 469 

— varying year with blade and sheaf - - Ten. 101 

— vastness of the agony of earth - - L. of A. 59 

— very age and body of --■-■- Sha. 827 

— very name of God Col. 9 

— very staff of my age Sha. 186 

— very tongue, whose keen reproof before Dante 106 

— vested priest before the altar stands - Wor. 377 

— victory of endurance born - Bry. 182 

— village bell tolls out the note of death. (Mel- 

moth.) ------- Gol. 55 

— village life and every care that reigns - Cra. 236 

— villainy you teach me, I will execute - - Sha. 192 

— violet in her greenwood bower - - - Scott 373 

— violet loves a sunny bank - Fav. 70 

— virgin lilies in their white - Flo. 161 

— virgin mountain, wearing like a queen - Wor. 371 

— voice and the peak - - - - - - Ten. 536 

— voice of song from distant lands shall call - Wor. 270 

— voices of my home !--•-•-- Hem. 25 

— voices of two forest boys - Hem. 429 

— vulgar boil, the learned roast an egg - Pope 313 

— wall-flower — the wall-flower - - - Flo. 84 

— wanton's charms, however bright - - Tho. 394 

— war-note of the Saracen - - - Hem. 206 

— warder looks down at the mid-hour - Goe. 131 

— warm moon was up in the sky - - - Mer. 267 

— warm sun is failing, the bleak wind She. 433; Fav. 418 

— warrior bowed his crested head - - Hem. 223 

34 



The son 

Their ,)oV 

The warrior crossed the ocean's foam - - Hem. 335 

— water-lilies, that glide so pale - - - Flo. 161 

— water understands civilization well - - Erne. 284 

— waters are flashing She. 437 

— waters rushed, the waters rose - Goe. 108 

— waters slept. Night's silvery veil - - Wil. 28 

— wave is breaking on the shore - Whi. 60 

— way was long and dreary - Pro. 113 

— way was long, the wind was cold - - Scott 7 

— weakest goes to the wall - Sha. 712 

— wealthy, curled darlings of our nation - Sha. 881 

— weary year his race now having run - Spe. 697 

— web of our life is of a mingled yarn - - Sha. 272 

— weltering London ways where - - - Ros. 296 

— western gale, mild as the kisses - - White 260 

— whistle and the man ; I sing - - - Burns 441 

— white sail caught the evening ray - Moore 652 

— why is plain as way ----- Sha. 213 

— wild gazelle on Judah's hills - - Byron 191 

— Wildgrave winds his bugle horn - - Scott 359 

— wind blew hollow frae the hills - - Burns 136 

— wind flapped loose ----- R s. 150 

— wind has swept from the wide atmosphere She. 396 

— wind is now thy organist ; — a clank - Wor. 384 

— wind is roistering out of doors - - - Low. 329 

— wind sounds only in opposing - - - Bro. 90 

— wind, that beats the mountain, blows - Ten. 55 

— wind went forth o'er land and sea - - Pro. 315 

— winding way the serpent takes - - - Whi. 347 

— winds, as at their hour of birth - - Ten. 474 

— winds were yelling, the waves were swelling Mac. 197 

— wine month shone in its golden prime - Hem. 322 

— wine of life is drawn and the mere lees - Sha. 795 

— wings of time are black and white - - Erne. 229 

— winter it is past, and the summer's come at Burns 218 

— winter night now well nigh worn away - Cow. 545 

— wintry west extends his blest - - Burns 35 

— wisdom owned by all Thy sons - - Wes. 229 

— wisest, brightest, meanest of mankind ! - Pope 218 

— wisest soul by anguish torn - - - Moore 74 

— withered leaves, trembling, love - - - Flo. 195 

— woman-hearted confessor prepares - - Wor. 360 

— woman singeth at her spinning-wheel - Bro. 86 

— woman that now met, unshrinking, his gaze Mer. 35 

— women tell me every day - Moore 24 

— wonder is, he has endured - - - - Sha. 878 

— woods decay, the woods decay and fall - Ten. 383 

— woods — oh ! solemn are the boundless woods Hem. 170 

— word had just begun to steal - - - Moore 195 

— word of the Lord by night - Erne. 174 



531 

The works of ancient bards divine - 

— world, a man of noble mind 

— world, dear John, as the old folks told us - 

— world is dreary — a fragment 

— world is great : the birds all fly from me - 

— world is too much with us — a sonnet 

— world buds every year - 

— world forgetting, by the world forgot 

— world forsaken, all its busy cares - 

— world is grown so bad that wrens 

— world is not thy friend ... - 

— world is now our dwelling-place - 

— world is with me, and its many cares 

— world knows nothing of its greatest men - 

— world that cannot deem of worthy things 

— world was in its day of peril dark 

— world's great age begins anew - 

— world's mine oyster 

— worst is not so long as we - 

— wreath that star-crowned Shelley gave 

— wreath you wove, the wreath you wove - 

— wretch condemned with life to part - 

— year revolves, and I again explore - 

— years are many since his hand - 

— years are many since in youth and hope 

— yellow poplar leaves came down - 

— yesterday doth never smile 

— young disease, that must subdue at length 

— young Endymion sleeps Endymion's sleep 

— young maid stole through the cottage door 

— young ones gathered in from hill and dale 

— young rose which I give thee, so dewy 
Thebaid, Hermit of the ----- 
Thebais of Statius— a translation - 
Thebet ben Khorat, Scholar of - 
Theckla, c. in The Piccolomini 
Thee, Caledonia, thy wild heaths among 

— dear friend, a brother soothes 

— do I own, the prompter of my joys - 

— that my sacrifice may please 

— thee, only thee ! - 

— whose refulgent staff and summons clear 

Theft, On a late - 

Their coats of arms are noble deeds 

— discords sting through Burns and Moore 

— earthly task who fail to do - 

— first concern, alas, is mine 

— groves o' sweet myrtle let foreign Burns 284 

— lips were four red roses 

— swords as with instinctive leap - 



The 


Their 


• Cow. 


611 


Sen. 


245 


Fav. 


265 


She. 


504 


Eliot 


244 


Wor. 


233 


Mer. 


458 


Pope 


114 


Wor. 


317 


- Sha. 


561 


Sha. 


737 


- She. 


574 


Hood 


184 


Tay. 


56 


Spe. 


701 


Dante 


267 


She. 


391 


- Sha. 


49 


Sha. 


867 


- Hoi. 


129 


Moore 


161 


Gol. 


139 


Cra. 


260 


• Whi. 


187 


Whi. 


341 


• Ing. 


193 


Erne. 


217 


Pope 


198 


Lon. 


366 


Flo. 


12 


Wor. 


376 


Moore 


653 


- Whi. 


185 


Pope 


405 


Wil. 


201 


Col. 


407 


Burns 


144 


- Erne. 


18 


White 


15 


- Wes. 


247 


Moore 


266 


- Cow. 


557 


Cow. 


488 


- Fav. 


76 


Hoi. 


10 


- Wes. 


175 


Wes. 


233 


4; Flo. 


119 


Sha. 


581 


Moore 


454 



Theirs Kqn 

There °°^ 

Theirs was no dream, monarch hill - Hem. 249 

Thekla— a spirit voice ----- Sen. 230 

— at her lover's grave ----- Hem. 221 
Them sudden flight had scattered o'er the plain Dante 128 
Then black despair, the shadow of a starless She. 100 

— came a change as all things human change Ten. 342 

— came the mad retreat - Fav. 248 

— come kiss me, sweet and twenty - - - Sha. 287 

— fare thee well ------ Moore 527 

— fare thee well, deceitful maid ! - - Byron 172 

— fierce the hero o'er the threshold strode - Odys. 303 

— gently scan your brother man - - Burns 79 

— " G-lory to the Father, to the Son - - Dante 335 

— guidwife, count the la win," Eemarks on Burns 336 

— hate me when thou wilt ; if ever, now - Sha. 1039 

— know thy place (a novice cries - Wes. 168 

— let not winter's ragged hand — a sonnet - Sha. 1029 

— mother Ceres from afar beheld her - - Bro. 171 

— mount, brave gallants all. (Motherwell.) - Poe 49 

— never less alone than when alone - - Eog. 207 

— on th 1 unwholesome earth - Flo. 48 

— out spoke brave Horatius - - - - Fav. 345 

— Psyche, weak in body and soul - - - Bro. 169 

— shall our names familiar - - - - Sha. 458 

— she whom Radna sent came to the canes 1. S. S. 33 

— standing by the shore, I saw the moon - Mer. 459 

— the foul power of priestly sin - - - Bry. 62 

— they say, no spirit dares - - - - Sha. 812 

— thus Ulysses : '"Thou whom first in sway - Odys. 121 

— to breakfast with what appetite - - Sha. 609 

— to side with truth is noble - Low. 68 

— to the queen as in repose she lay - - Odys. 315 
Thence, up the sea-green floor, among the stems Mer. 452 
Theniel Menzie's bonny Mary — a song - - Burns 215 
Theocritus, Paraphrase on- - Bro. 166 
Theodore and Honoria ----- Dry. 452 
Theodric — a domestic tale ----- Cam. 109 
Theologian's tale, The - Lon. 264. 286, 299 

Theophania - Sch. 249 

Ther is at the west ende of Ytaile - - - Cha. 234 

— was, as telleth Titus Syvius - - - - Cha. 364 
Therburn, James, An elegy on Tho. 402 
There all the happy souls that ever were - Fav. 327 

— are a sort of men ----- Sha. 182 

— are beggars in Iran and Araby - - - Erne. 263 

— are bright scenes beneath Italian skies - Hem. 266 

— are distinctions that will live in heaven - Wil. 98 

— are flowers round about me - * - - Flo. 417 

— are gains for all our losses - Fav. 228 

— are, I scarce can think it, but am told - Pope 277 



533 



Theirs 
There 



There are in our existence spots of time - - Wor. 583 

— are in this rude stunning tide - - - Fav. 99 

— are many shrines of Our Lady - - - Pro. 400 

— are moments in life that are never forgot Fav. 235 

— are more things in heaven and earth - - Sha. 819 

— are more things in heaven and earth than we Pro. 298 

— are no colors in the fairest sky - Wor. 372 

— are no tricks in plain and simple faith - Sha. 780 

— are some qualities — some incorporate - - Poe 88 

— are some things hard to understand - Mer. 245 

— are that love the shades of life - Flo. 110 

— are three ways in which men - - - Hoi. 9 

— are times when all these terrors - - - Pro. 414 

— are two kinds of strength - Mer. 64 

— are who give themselves to work for men - Ing. 415 

— are who triumph in a losing cause - - Low. 102 

— be more of beauty's daughters - - Byron 259 

— breathes no being but has some pretense Fav. 322 

— breathes the language, known and felt Moore 536 

— came a bard to Rome : he brought a lyre Hem. 399 

— came a piper out o' Fife - - - Burns 269 

— came a youth upon the earth - - - Low. 44 

— came an image in life's retinue - - - Eos. 250 

— came three merry men from south - - Scott 422 

— came to the beach a poor exile of Erin - Cam. 153 

— comes a time - Moore 525 

— comes from yonder height - Bry. 219 

— died upon the Miraj night - - - P. of F. 59 

— grew a little flower once - Flo. 71 

— have been bright and glorious pageants here Hem. 318 

— in that bed so closely curtained round - Rog. 340 

— is a better life than I have known - - Fav. 41 

— is a bleak desert ----- Moore 349 

— is a bondage worse— a sonnet - - - Wor. 273 

— is a book which we may call - - - Cow. 600 

— is a budding morrow in midnight - - Ros. 301 

— is a change — and I am poor - Wor. 106 

— is a charm in footing slow across a silent Keats 266 

— is a cloud above the sunset hill - - - Ros. 291 

— is a cloud before the sun - - - - Ayt. 188 
* — is a day of sunny rest Bry. 36 

— is a deep and subtle snare - - - - Pro. 221 

— is a field through which I often pass - - Cow. 460 

— is a flower, a purple flower - - - Flo. 186 

— is a flower, the lesser celandine - - - Wor. 484 

— is a flower whose modest eye - - - Flo. 113 

— is a fountain filled with blood - - - Cow. 61 

— is a glorious city in the sea - - - Rog. 38 

— is a land, of every land the pride - - Fav. 337 

— is a little modest flower - Flo. 89 



There 



534 



There is a little mystic clock - Fa v. 208 

— is a mood of mind we all have known - Scott 310 

— is a mystic thread of life - - - Byron 241 

— is a place— so Aristotle sings - - - Gol. 147 

— is a place within the depths of hell - Dante 60 

— is a pleasure in the pathless woods - - Fav. 122 

— is a quiet spirit in these woods - - - Lon. 9 

— is a reaper, whose name is Death - Lon. 3 ; Flo. 484 

— is a silence where hath been no sound Hood 167 

— is a sound of thunder afar- - - - Ten. 488 

— is a streamlet issuing from a rock - - Eog. 236 

— is a tear for all that die - Byron 258 

— is a thorn — it looks so old - - - Wor. 180 

— is a tide in the affairs of men - - - Sha. 782 

— is a tide in the affairs of women - - Byron 400 

— is a tongue in every leaf - Flo. 337 

— is a little unpretending rill— a sonnet - Wor. 227 

— is a pleasure in poetic pains — a sonnet - Wor. 237 

— is a voice not understood by all - - - She. 574 

— is a warm and gentle atmosphere - - She. 505 

— is a willow grows aslant - Flo. 143 

— is a yew-tree, pride of Lorton vale - - Wor. 169 

— is an eminence ------ Wor. 137 

— is an insect, that, when evening comes - Eog. 120 

— is clover, honey-sweet ----- Flo. 194 

— is diff erency between a grub and a butterfly Sha. 685 

— is in life no blessing like affection - - Fav. 278 

— is in souls a sympathy with sounds - - Cow. 342 

— is mist on the mountain - Scott 393 

— is no caste in blood which runneth L. of A. 101 

— is no charm in time, as time, nor good - Fav. 308 

— is no death ! what seems so is transition - Lon. 129 

— is no God, but God ! - - - - P. of F. 190 

— is no God ! " the foolish saith - - - Bro. 271 

— is no flock, however watched and tended - Lon. 129 

— is no land like England - Ten. 474 

— is no one beside thee and no one - - - Bro. 294 

— is no quiet left in life - - - - - Mer. 271 

— is no terror, Cassius ----- Sha. 781 

— is not in the wide world a valley so sweet Moore 218 

— is nothing either good ----- Sha. 822 

— is occasions and causes - - Sha. 464 

— is some soul of goodness in things evil - Sha. 455 

— is sweet music here that softer falls - Ten. 47 

— is war in the skies ! ----- Mer. 45 

— is, within three leagues and less of Padua Rog. 67 

— late was one within whose subtle being - She. 398 

— lay upon the ocean's shore - Low. 338 

— lies a shell beneath the waves - - Moore 128 

31 



lies a vale in Ida, lovelier - 



Ten. 



535 



There 



There live not three good men unhanged - Sha. 391 

— lived a carle in Kellyburn - - - Burns 245 

— lived a lass in yonder dale - - - Burns 290 

— lived, as authors tell, in days of yore - Dry. 383 

— lived in Lombardy, as authors write - - Pope 466 

— lived in the desert a holy man - - - Goe. 230 

— lovely bee-bird ! mayst thou rove - - Flo. 127 

— needed, Lord, no act of thine - - - Wes. 243 

— needs na be so great a phrase. (Skinner.) Burns 293 

— needs no ghost ------ Sha. 818 

— never breathed a man who, when his life - Wor. 487 

— never yet was flower — a sonnet - - Low. 21 

— once was a wicked old gray king - - - Mer. 270 

— said a stripling — a sonnet - - Wor. 407 ; Flo. 432 

— St. John mingles with my friendly bowl - Pope 281 

— sat one day in quiet Lon. 21 

— shall be in England seven - Sha. 517 

— sits a lovely maiden - - - - - Bry. 155 

— stands a dwelling vast and tall - - - Sch. 194 

— stands on yonder high mountain - - Goe. 59 

— still remains, to mortify a wit - - - Pope 307 

— stood an unsold captive in the mart - Wil. 195 

— take (says Justice), take ye each - - Pope 378 

— through the long summer hours - Poe 33 ; Fav. 158 

— was a bomiy lass — a song - Burns 276 

— was a boy ------- Wor. 168 

— was a Brutus once ----- Sha. 766 

— was a feast that night - - - - - Fav. 318 

— was a giant in time of old - - - - Hoi. 7 

— wai a holy h3rmit. (Spanish Gypsy.) - Eliot 265 

— was a lad was born in Kyle - - - Burns 196 

— was a lady— fair and forty too - - - Wil. 117 

— was a lass — a song ----- Burns 199 

— was a laughing devil in his sneer - - Byron 30 

— was a little bird upon that pile - - White 367 

— was a little lawny islet - She. 508 

— was a little man and he had a little soul Moore 335 

— was a man whom you might see - - Mer. 265 

— was a pretty may and a milkin' she went Burns 304 

— was a roaring in the wind all night - - Wor. 178 

— was a sound of hurrying feet - - - Hoi. 72 

— was a sound of revelry by night - - Byron 304 

— was a time ------ Byron 231 

— was a time when ^Etna's silent fire - - Cow. 404 

— was a time when meadow, grove, and stream Wor. 498 

— was a vase of odor lay - - - Moore 153 

— was a wife— a song - Burns 292 

— was a wooer blithe and gay - - - Goe. 105 

— was a worthy but a simple pair - - - Cra. 80 

— was a young man in Boston town - - Hoi. 43 



332? 536 

There was a youth who, as with toil and travel She. 452 

— was ance a May, and she lo'd no men - Burns 317 

— was heard a song on the chiming sea - - Hem. 215 

— was heard the sound of a coming foe - Hem. 136 

— was music on the midnight ! - - - - Hem. 210 

— was never mystery but 'tis figured - - Erne. 106 

— was once a day — but old time - - Burns 271 

— was silence in heaven ----- Wes. 307 

— was, 'tis said, and I believe, a time - - Cra. 292 

— was woman's fearless eye - Hem. 416 

— went a dirge through the forest's gloom - Hem. 225 

— went a warrior's funeral through the gloom Hem. 180 

— were five carlines through the south - Burns 220 

— were fights and sounds of revelry - - Hem. 216 

— were thick leaves above me and around - Hem. 412 

— were three kings into the east - - - Burns 193 
Thereat, — as one who welcomes to her throne I. S. S. 29 
Thereby hangs a tale ... - Sha. 213, 243 
Therefore all hearts in love use their own tongues Sha. 116 

— love moderately ; long love doth so - - Sha. 725 

— my age is as a - - - - - - Sha, 211 

— think not the past is wise alone - - Low. 231 
There'll never be peace till Jamie comes hame Burns 230 
There's a bower of roses by Bendemeer 's stream Moore 384 

— a divinity that shapes our ends - - - Sha. 842 

— a little low hut by the river - - - Fav. 287 

— a murmur in the air - -Hood 129 

— a skirmish of wit between them - - Sha. Ill 

— a special providence in the fall - - - Sha. 844 

— a thing that grows by the fainting flower Hoi. 73 

— a youth in this city — a song - - - Burns 22Q 

— auld Eob Morris that wons - - - Burns 243 

— auld Eob Morris that wins (old ballad) Burns 325 

— beauty all around our paths - - - Hem. 350 

— beggary in the love that - Sha. 911 

— braw, braw lads on Yarrow braes - - Burns 250 

— cauld kail in Aberdeen - Burns 320 

— daggers in men's smiles - Sha. 796 

— death in the cup — sae beware ! - - Burns 184 
. — fascination in thy glowing eye - - - Byron 244 

— George Fisher. Charles Fleming - - - Wor. 85 

— husbandry in heaven ----- Sha. 793 

— joy in the mountains ----- Wor. 174 

— more in words than I can teach - - Wor. 132 

— nae luck about the house - - - Burns 306 
*- neither honesty, manhood - - - Sha. 384 

— news, lasses, news — a song - - - Burns 292 

— no art to find the mind's construction - Sha. 790 

— no dew left on the daisies and clover - - Ing. 126 

— no menagerie I vow G-oe. 188 



537 



There 
They 



There's not a cheaper thing on earth - - Fav. 213 

— not a cloud in that blue plain - - - Moore 442 

— not a joy the world can give - - Byron 258 

— not a nook within this solemn pass - - Wor. 384 

— not an arrow wings the sky - - - Moore 439 

— not an echo round me ----- Cow. 622 

— nothing ill can dwell in such a temple - Sha. 6 

— rosemary, that's for remembrance - - Sha. 837 

— small choice in rotten apples - - - Sha. 233 

— some is born with their straight legs by natur Hood 369 

— something in a flying horse - - - Wor. 214 

— something in a noble boy - Wil. 282 

— such a charm in melancholy - Rog. 251 

— such divinity doth hedge - Sha. 836 

— the humor of it - - - - - - Sha. 48 

Theresa, c. in Siege of Valencia - - - Hem. 434 

Thersites, c. in Troilus and Cressida - - Sha. 622 

These are not dewdrops, these are tears - - Cow. 487 

— are the gardens of the desert - - - Bry. 130 

— are the groves a grateful people gave - - Rog. 341 

— are the tales those merry guests - - Lon. 316 

— are the voices three - - - - - Lon. 349 

— are thy glorious works, Parent of good - Mil. 114 

— are two friends whose lives were undivided She. 448 

— as they change, almighty Father Tho. 190 ; Fav. 119 

— blessed candles of the night - - - Sha. 203 

— few leaves, oh, ye graces ... - G e. 280 

— little firs to-day are things - - - Ros. 151 

— locks, which fondly thus entwine - Byron 144 

— prairies glow with flowers - - - Bry. 241 

— rugged, wintry days I scarce could bear - Low. 24 

— strifes, these tumults of the noisy world Bry. 226 

— things are beyond all use - - - - Sha. 772 

— times strike moneyed worldlings — a sonnet Wor. 273 

— to his memory — since he held them dear - Ten. 253 

— tourists, heaven preserve us ! - Wor. 93 

— tufted branches fair Goe. 375 

— two hated with a hate - Byron 381 

— verses also to thy praise, the nine - - Cow. 583 

— violent delights have violent ends - - Sha. 724 

— words the poets heard in paradise - - Lon. 408 
Theseus, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 161 

— Shade of - Hem. 141 

Thespis, the first professor of our art - - Dry. 491 

Thessalonians, On a passage in, Epistle to - Wes. 157 

Thestylis, Mourning muse of - - - - Spe. 633 

They are all up— the innumerable stars - - Wil. 71 

— are as sick, that surfeit ---."- Sha. 182 

— are assailable Sha. 798 

— are not the men you Sha. 122 



I'h.ey 
This 



538 



They are the abstract and - Sha. 824 

— bid me sing to thee ----- Bro. 74 

— bid me sleep, they bid me pray - - - Scott 139 

— bid me strike the" idle strings - - - Hoi. 33 

— brought me rubies from the mine - - Erne. 188 

— call tnee Merry England — a sonnet - - Wor. 397 
-— call thee rich— I deem thee poor - - - Cow. 518 

— die— the dead return not. Misery - - She. 406 

— dreamt not of a perishable home — a sonnet Wor. 381 

— fool me to the top of my bent - - - Sha. 830 

— grew in beauty side by side - Hem. 426 ; Fav. 164 

— have left the doors ajar - - - - Ten. 696 

— have left you, little Henry - Ing. 471 

— have measured many a mile - - - Sha. 153 

— have rights who dare maintain them - - Low. 69 

— hear thee not, O God ! nor see - - - Whi. 83 

— know not my heart - Moore 273 

— laugh that win - - ... - Sha. 900 

— left their home of summer ease - - - Whi. 404 

— lighted their taper at the dead of night - Cam. 196 

— loved, but under friendship's name - - Rog. 226 

— made her a grave, too cold and damp Moore 126 

— may rail at this lif e ----- Moore 260 

— may seize on the white wonder - - - Sha. 728 

— niay talk of love in a cottage - - - Wil. 192 

— mock my toil — the nymphs and amorous Cow. 597 

— parted — ne'er to meet again ! - - - Col. 16 

— pass me by like shadows, crowds on crowds Low. 24 

— placed a fruitless crown - Sha. 797 

— put their finger on their lip - - - Erne. 300 

— rose to where their sovran eagle sails - - Ten. 721 

— sat in silent watchfulness - Whi. 108 

— say ideal beauty cannot enter - Bro. 91 

— say that God lives very high - - - Bro. 69 

— say that Jockey '11 speed well o't. (Ross.) Burns 331 

— say that love had once a book - - - Moore 166 

— say through patience chalk becomes - - Erne. 247 

— seek, are sought ; to daily battle led - Wor. 282 

— sought for treasures in the tomb - Hem. 312 

— stand between the mountains and the sea Rog. 154 

— tak te horse then by te head - - Burns 301 

— take not from ancestral graves - - Fav. 76 

— talk of short-lived pleasure — be it so - - Bry. 70 

— tell how Atys, wild with love - - - Moore 26 

— tell me, Lucy, thou art dead - - - Whi. 131 

— tell me thou art come - Wil. 64 

— tell us of an Indian tree - Moore 603 

— that have power to hurt and will do none Sha. 1039 

— that in course of heavenly spheres - - Spe. 697 

— that touch pitch - Sha. 122 



539 



They 
This 



They try to persuade me, my dear little sprite Moore 122 

— were gathered for a bridal - - - Flo. 387 

— who have best succeeded on the stage - Dry. 513 

— who have seen the noble Roman's scorn Wor. 313 

— who kneel at woman's shrine - Wil. 287 

— wove the lotus band to deck - = Moore 57 
Thick as autumnal leaves that strew the brooks "Wor. 317 

— rushing like an ocean vast - Low. 9 
Thickest night o'erhang my dwelling ! - - Burns 209 
Thief, Innocent Cow. 606 

— On a - - - - - - - - Cow. 521 

Thiers, Louis Adolphe Whi. 410 

Thin are the night-skirts left behind - - Eos. 290 

Thine are all the gifts, O God ! - Whi. 415 

— be the volumes, Jessy, fair - - - Burns 148 

— eye was on the censer Hoi. 80 

— eyes are charmed — thine earnest eyes - Hem. 227 

— eyes' blue tenderness, thy long fair hair Byron 254 

— eyes I love, and they, as pitying me— a sonnet Sha. 1044 

— eyes shall see the light of distant skies - Bry. 127 

— eyes still shined ------ Erne. 88 

— image if thou stamp on me - - - - Wes. 246 

— is a grief, the depth of which another - Whi. 138 

— is a strain to read among the hills - - Hem. 406 

— is the gentle day of love - Tho. 430 
Thing devised by the enemy ... - Sha. 590 
Things ill got had ever bad success - - Sha. 534 

— in motion sooner catch ----- Sha. 639 

— without all remedy Sha. 798 

Think, Delia, with what cruel haste - - Cow. 29 

— me not unkind and rude - Erne. 105 

— not of it, sweet one, so Keats 239 

— not that thou and I Bry. 348 

— of that, Master Brook Sha. 58 

— on that look of humid ray - Moore 88 

— thou and act ; to-morrow thou - Eos. 262 

— you I am no stronger than my sex - - Sha. 771 
Think'st thou I saw thy beauteous eyes - Byron 135 
Third angel's story - Moore 562 

— battle, The ------ - Iliad 238 

— of February, 1852 - - - - - Ten. 486 

— of November, 1861 - Bry. 266 

Thirlby, Thomas, c. in Queen Mary - - Ten. 537 

Thirsis and Corydon — a pastoral - - - Tho. 455 

— David, and Gabriel — a pastoral - - Tho. 453 

Thirty-five Wil. 65 

This ancient silver bowl of mine - Hoi. 30 ; Fav. 104 

— band, which bound thy yellow hair - Byron 166 

— bodes some strange eruption - - - Sha. 812 

— box, mine own sweet darling - - - G-oe. 219 



Thomson ° ±yj 

This bud of love, by summer's ripening - Sha. 720 

— cabin, Mary, in my sight appears - - Cow. 496 

— cap that so stately appears - - - Cow. 439 

— castle has a pleasant seat V Sha. 792 

— child is not mine as the first was - - Low. 90 

— day a new house for your edification - Moore 333 

— day among the faithful placed - - - Col. 90 

— day is called the feast of Sha. 458 

— day, time winds the exhausted chain - Burns 123 

— day, two hundred years ago - - - Whi. 249 

— denoted a foregone conclusion - - - Sha. 896 

— earth that bears the deed ... - Sha. 407 

— England never did nor never shall - - Sha. 355 

— evening, Delia, you and I - Cow. 30 

— faint resemblance of thy charms - - Byron 141 

— feast day of the sun - - Eos. 261 

— fell sergeant, death ----- Sha. 845 

— heart, you would not have - - - - Mer. 453 

— height a ministering angel might select - Wor. 198 

— holy season, fit to fast and pray - - - Spe. 691 

— house was Andrea Doria's - - - Hog. 166 

— is Ercles' vein ------ Sha. 163 

— is he, who, felled by foes - - - - Erne. 237 

— is her picture as she was ... - Ros. 80 

— is its touch upon the blossomed rose L. of A. 148 

— is no my ain house, " Eemarks on - Burns 328 

— is no my ain lassie — a song - - - Burns 286 

— is that blessed Mary, pre-elect - - - Eos. 156 

— is the arsenal. From floor to ceiling - Lon. 78 

— is the castle of king Macbeth - - - Mer. 269 

— is the church which Pisa, great and free Bry. 162 

— is the day when the fairy kind - - - Scott 426 

— is the feast of heavenly wine - - - Cow. 70 

— is the forest primeval ----- Lon. 95 

— is the land, the happy valleys these - Mer. 312 

— is the midnight of the century - - - Low. 339 

— is the month and this the happy morn - Mil. 405 

— is the night that either ----- Sha. 906 

— is the place. Even here - Eos. 295 

— is the place. Stand still, my steed - - Lon. 78 

— is the ship of pearl, which poets Hoi. 161 ; Fav. 425 

— is the short and long of it - - - - Sha. 49 

— is the time, when, most divine to hear - Col. 63 

— is the very coinage ----- Sha. 833 

— is the very ecstasy of love - - - Sha. 820 

— is very midsummer madness - - - Sha. 294 

— land of rainbows spanning glens whose walls Wor. 384 

— lawn, a carpet ail alive Wor. 428 

— letter greets you from the shades - - Pope 361 

— life is all checkered with pleasures and woes Mer. 240 



541 



This 
Thomson 



This lime-tree bower my prison - - - Col. 173 

— little blossom from afar - - - - Low. 5 

— little flower from afar - Flo. 11 

— little rill that from the springs - - - Bry. 50 

— modest stone, what few vain - - - Pope 347 

— morn thy gallant bark ----- She. 448 

— morning is the morning of the day - - Ten. 65 

— morning, like the spirit of a youth - - Sha. 933 

— morning, when the earth and sky - - Moore 152 

— mortal body of a thousand days - - - Keats 255 

— moss-lined shed, green, soft, and dry - Wor. 152 

— narrow isthmus 'twixt two boundless seas Moore 381 

— nosegay, — 'twas I dressed it Goe. 52 

— page a chain to bring thee burns - - - Goe. 51 

— passing moment is an edifice - - - Erne. 288 

— region, surely, is not of the earth - - Rog. 137 

— rich marble doth inter -• - Mil. 416 

— riche Cresus, whilom king of Lyde - - Cha. 475 

— royal throne of kings, this sceptered isle Sha. 362 

— sickness doth infect the very life-blood - Sha. 401 

— sompnour in his styrup up he stood - Cha. 216 

— song of mine ------- Lon. 221 

— spot — at once unfolding sight so fair - Wor. 442 

— sunlight shames November where he Eos. 163, 261 

— sweaty haste doth make the night - *- Sha. 812 

— sycamore, oft musical with bees - - - Col. 171 

— to me is life ; that if life - Fav. 188 

— tomb, inscribed to gentle Parneirs name - Gol. 137 

— tribute from a wretched elf - - - Moore 101 

— trifle, begun to please only myself - - Low. 115 

— truth may be by all believed - - - Goe. 256 

— verse be thine, my friend - Pope 335 

— votive pledge of fond esteem - - - Byron 137 

— was a man !------- Sha. 787 

— was the most unkindest cut of all - - Sha. 778 

— was the noblest Roman of them all - - Sha. 787 

— wax returns not back more fair - - Cam. 194 

— world is all a fleeting show - - - Moore 339 

— world was once a fluid haze of light - Ten. 130 

— wot ye all whom it concerns - - Burns 100 

— worthy lymptour, this noble frere - - Cha. 207 

— wretched worldes transmutation - Cha. 597 
Thistle, Poesy of the Flo. 191 
Thomalin, who sitten' we so - - - Spe. 528 
Thomas, a friar, c. in Measure for Measure Sha. 67 

— duke of Clarence, c. in Henry iv., pt. 2 - Sha. 409 
Thompson, Douglas. Days of Yore, The - Fav. 285 

— P., Letters to ----- White 167, 180 
Thomson, Catharine, Sonnet in memory of - Mil. 477 

— George, Correspondence with - - Burns 514. 



Thomson 
Thou 



542 



THOMSON, JAMES, Poems of: 



iEolus's Harp, On .... 

" Agamemnon," Epilogue to . 

Aikman, Mr., Death of . 

Alfred, To 

Amanda, To 

Autumn 

Beauty, On 

Bennet, Sir William, Epistle to 

Britain 

Britannia 

Castle of Indolence 

Come, gentle god of soft desire 

Complaint on the Miseries of Life 

Contentment .... 

Country Life, On a . 

David, Thirsis, and Angel Gabriel 

Death of his mother, On the 

Epilogue 

Flower from his mistress, On re- 
ceiving a 

Fortune, To 

From those eternal regions bright 

God of fond desire 

God's Power, Hymn to 

Greece ...... 

Happiness, On ... 

Happy Man. The .... 

Her I love, To ... . 

Hoop, On the 

Hymn 

Incomparable Soporific Doctor . 

Italy, Ancient and Modern, com- 
pared 

Liberty 

Lisy's parting with her Cat . 

Love, To 

Lover's Fate, The .... 

Mallet's " Mustapha," Prologue to 

Marlefield, Lines on 



Masque of Alfred, Songs in the 

Matthew, chapter vi.— a para- 
phrase .... 

May, On 

Mendez, Mrs., Birthday of 

Morning in the Country 

Murdock, Patrick, To the Rev. 

Myra, To . . ... 

Newton, Sir Isaac. To memory of 

Nightingale, To the 

Nuptial Song .... 

Parting, Elegy on . 

Pastoral betw ixt David and Thir- 
sis 

— Entertainment 
Peace, To . 

Prince of Wales, To the 
Prologues . 
Prospect, The 
Psalm 104 paraphrased 
Rome . 
Rule, Britannia!. 
Seasons, The 
Seraphina, To . 
Solitude, Hymn on 
Sonnet: Amanda, To 
Spring . 

Stanley, Miss, Epitaph 
Summer 
Sweet Valley, Say . 

Talbot, Lord, To memory of . 
Tancred and Sigismunda, Epi- 
logue to ... . 

Prologue to 

Therburn, James, Elegy on 
Thirsis and Corydon— a pastoral 

— David and Gabriel— a pastoral 

Winter 

Wooden Bridge at Westminster 



470 

413 
396 
430 
396 
447 
463 
406 
462 
459 



453 
457' 
470 
431 
475 



230 
473 

7 
394 
416 
467 

8 

448 

46 

471 



478 
477 
402 
455 
453 
150 



Thomson, James. Lilac, The - 

Rule, Britannia ----- 

Seasons, The — an extract - 

Sunflower, The ----- 

Thomson, Address to the shade of - 

Thora of Rimol 

Thorberg Skafting, master-builder 
Thorn, The ------ - 

Thornbury, Walter. In clover 
Thornton, J. , In memory of - 
Thorwald's lay ------ 

Those ancient men, what were they 

— best can bear reproof who merit praise 

— breathing tokens of your kind regard 

— deep and tender twilight eyes 

— envied places which do know her well - 

— evening bells - - - - Hood 480 ; 

— evening clouds, that setting ray 

— few pale autumn flowers 

— friends thou hast and their adoption tried 



- Flo. 175 
Fav. 334 

- Fav. 119 

Flo. 147 

Burns 137 

Lon. 248 

Lon. 256 

- Wor. 180 

- Flo. 194 
Cow. 476 

- Low. 355 
Rog. 116 

- Pope 56 
Wor. 450 

- Fav. 443 
Ros. 234 

Moore 522 

Scott 373 

■ Flo. 474 

Sha. 815 



KJ.Q Thomson 

Those groans of deep anguish - Sen. 43 

— had given earliest notice, as the lark - Wor. 365 

— hours, that with work — a sonnet - - Sha. 1028 

— lines that I before have writ do lie — a sonnet Sha. 1040 

— lips that love's own hand did make — a sonnet Sha. 1045 

— move easiest who have learned to dance Pope 50 

— oft are stratagems which errors seem - Pope 45 

— old credulities to nature dear - - - Wor. 313 

— parts of thee that the world's eye doth view Sha. 1036 

— petty wrongs that liberty commits— a sonnet Sha. 1033 

— prudent heads that with their counsels wise Spe. 25 

— silver clouds collected round the sun - Wor. 199 

— that he loved so long ----- Bog. 207 

— that of late had fleeted far and fast - - Ten. 720 

— two whispered words in his breast - - Mer. 66 

— who inflict must suffer, for they see - She. 213 

— whom nor power — a fragment - - She. 501 

— words were uttered as in a pensive mood - Wor. 236 
Thou ancient oak! whose myriad leaves are Lon. 381 

— art a thing on our dreams to rise - - Hem. 377 

— art as tyrannous, so as thou art — a sonnet Sha. 1044 

— art come from the spirits' land - - - Hem. 132 

— art confused, my beloved, at seeing - Goe. 257 

— art e'en as just a man Sha. 827 

— art fair, and few are fairer - She. 419 

— art no lingerer in monarch's hall - - - Hem. 420 

— art not false ------ Byron 252 

— art not steeped in golden languors - - Ten. 10 

— art, O God ! the life and light - - - Moore 339 

— art sounding on, thou mighty sea ! - - Hem. 376 

— art the ruins of the noblest man - - Sha. 776 

— art to all lost love the best - Flo. 144 

— base repiner at another's joy - - - White 364 

— bay-crowned living one - Bro. 268 

— bearest flowers within thy hand - - Flo. 162 

— bed in which I first began - Burns 127 

— bleedest, my poor heart ! — a sonnet - - Col. 92 

— blind fool, love, what dost thou to mine eyes Sha. 1044 

— blossom bright with autumn dew - - Bry. 128 

— brooklet, all unknown to song % - - Lon. 391 

— by whom, freed from rules - - - Sch. 282 

— canst not, Lord, a beggar spurn - - - Wes. 263 

— canst not say I did it - - - - - Sha. 799 

— comest ! all is said without a word - - Bro. 161 

— comest, autumn, heralded by the rain - Lon. 91 

— cutt'st my head off with a golden axe - Sha. 728 

— didst swear to me Sha. 415 

— dost complain of women for changing - Goe. 271 

— dwellest not, O Lord of all ! - - - Whi. 340 

— first-born of the year's delight - - - Flo. 21 



Thou 
Though 



544 



Thou nattering mark of friendship kind - Burns 103 

— foolish Hafiz ! - - - - - - - Erne. 247 

— from the first, unborn, undying love - Ten. 472 

— gentle look — a sonnet ----- Col. 92 

— ghost, I said, and is thy name to-day - Ros. 245 

— Giver of all (anon.) - - - - Flo. 447 

— G-od of harmony and love - - - - Wes. 95 

— goest ! I murmur ------ Goe. 161 

— great first cause least understood - - Pope 221 

— happy, happy elf ! ----- -Hood 395 

— hast a lovely one indeed - Wes. 301 

— hast been where the rocks of coral - - Fav. 295 
■ — hast crossed over torrents - Sch. 228 

— hast damnable iteration - Sha. 384 

— hast done well perhaps - Pro. 102 

— hast done well to kneel and say - - - Pro. 283 

— hast fallen in thine armor - - - - Whi. 133 

— hast inspired me with thy soul - - - Dry. 22 

— hast left me ever— a song - - - - Burns 257 

— hast most traitorously corrupted - - Sha. 519 

— hast my better years ----- Bry. 122 

— hast no lightnings, O Thou just ! - - - Cow. 620 

— hast no speculation ----- Sha. 800 

— hast not been with a festal throng - - Hem. 434 

— hast produced mighty monarchs - - Sch. 264 

— hast sent me a flowery band - - - Moore 77 

— hast some crotchets ----- Sha. 48 

— hast thy calling to some palace - - - Bro. 153 

— indeed little swallow ----- Bro. 180 

— lingerest, spring, still wintry - - - Flo. 449 

— ling'ring star, with less'ning ray - - Burns 219 

— look'dst on me all yesternight - - - Low. 17 

— look'dst upon me and dost fondly think Wor. 398 

— lovely and beloved, thou my love - - Ros. 239 

— magic lyre, whose fascinating sound - Cow. 41 

— man of an unbridled tongue - - - Wes. 176 

— marshalTst me the way - Sha. 793 

— mayst of double ignorance boast - - - Cow. 610 

— mighty prince of church and state - - Lon. 339 

— of an independent mind - Burns 184 

— of tuneful bards the first - - - - Moore 38 

— oft hast told me of the fairy hours - Moore 185 

— poor leaf so sear and frail - - - - Mac. 162 

— royal river, born of sun and shower - - Lon. 382 

— sacred pile! - ------ Wor. 298 

— sayest an undisputed thing - Hoi. 3 

— seest her pictured with her shining hair Hem. 392 

— setting moon ! when next thy rays - - Hem. 279 

— shalt have justice ----- Sha. 200 

— shalt not try to plant Erne. 276 



£.ax Thou 

D±S> Though 

Thou Shepherd that dost Israel keep - - Mil. 491 

— shouldst be looked on when the starlight - Hem. 316 

— simple lyre ! — Thy music wild - - - White 279 

— slave, thou wretch, thou coward ! - - Sha. 341 

— sleepest — but when wilt thou wake - - Hem. 419 

— so needful, yet so dread - Scott 437 

— soul that art the eternity of thought - - Wor. 506 

— spirit of the spangled night ! White 271 

— still unravished bride of quietness ! - - Keats 234 

— sure and firm-set earth - - - - Sha. 793 

— sweetest minstrel of the grove. (Turnbull.) Burns 542 

— that canst gaze upon thine own fail* boy - Hem. 375 

— that from the heavens art - Lon. 340 

— that hast given so much to me - - - Her. 211 

— thing of years departed ! Hem. 428 

— to thy rest art gone ----- Hem. 455 

— troublest me : I am not - Sha. 580 

— unrelenting past ! - Bry. 121 

— very present aid ------ Wes. 127 

— wakest from rosy sleep, to play - - Hem. 375 

— wast my guide in infancy - Wes. 283 

— wast that all to me, love - - - - Poe 84 

— wear a lion's hide - Sha. 341 

— wert forcibly seized by the hoary lord - Goe. 268 

— wert not, Cassius. and thou couldst not be She. 502 

— wert my guide, philosopher and friend - Pope 220 

— wert the morning star ----- She. 533 

— who art of earth the queen - - - Goe. 401 

— who comest from on high - Goe. 62 

— who condemnest Jewish hate - - - Her. 272 

— who dost dwell and linger here below - Her. 271 

— who hast taught the teachers of mankind Hoi. 264 

— who seek'st my fountain lone - - - Scott 427 

— who shalt stop where Thames' translucent Pope 376 

— who so long hast pressed the couch of pain Bry. 240 

— who so long hast saved me here - - Wes. 283 

— who stealest five Ten. 13 

— who thy honor, as thy God reverest - Burns 137 

— who wouldst read - Bry. 329 

— who wouldst see the lovely - - - Bry. 63 

— who wouldst wear the name - - - Bry. 306 

— whom chance may hither lead - - - Burns 113 

— whom the former precepts have - - - Her. 106 

— whose soft and rosy hues - Moore 29 

— whose spell can raise the dead - - Byron 193 

— whose sweet youth and early hopes enhance Her. 89 

— wouldst be loved ? Then let thy heart - Poe 85 

— youngest virgin daughter of the skies - Dry. 296 
Though actors cannot much of learning boast Dry. 500 

— all great deeds -a sonnet - Ing. 460 

35 



Though 
Threnody 



546 



Though all the precious promises - - - Wes. 169 

— Artemesia talks, by fits - Pope 448 

— cruel fate should bid us part - - Burns 195 
^- dark are our sorrows, to-day well forget Moore 234 

— fate, my girl, may bid us part - - Moore 71 

— fickle fortune has deceived me - - - Burns 176 

— he lived and died among us - - - - Pro. 50 

— I am not splenitive and rash - - - Sha. 842 

— I beheld at first — a sonnet - Wor. 248 

— I'm formed, from the ether blue - - Scott 427 

— it make the unskillful laugh - - - Sha. 827 

— joy attend thee, orient, at the birth - - Wor. 387 

— last not least in love Sha. 776 

— loath to grieve ------ Erne. 71 

— long at school and college, dozing - Moore 96 

— love repine and reason chafe - - - Erne. 243 

— many great doctors there be - - Moore 630 

— many suns have risen and set - - - Wor. 434 

— much averse, dear Jack, to flicker - - Col. 89 

— narrow be that old man's cares — a sonnet Wor. 239 

— nature weigh our talents and dispense - Cow. 200 

— Nestor swear the jest Sha. 181 

— night hath climbed her peak — a sonnet - Ten. 471 

— no more musing ear ----- Flo. 294 

— old the thought and oft exprest - - - Low. 339 

— once a puppy, and though Fop by name - Cow. 492 

— right be oft put down by strength - - Scott 386 

— roused by that dark visir riot rude - - Col. 94 

— sacred the tie that our country entwineth Moore 301 

— searching damps and many - - - Wor. 300 

— severed from its native clime - Flo. 157 

— soldiers are the true supports - - - Moore 579 

— sorrow long has worn my heart - - Moore 106 

— sprightly Sappho force our love - - Pope 399 

— tempers are bad and peevish folks - - Goe. 223 

— the bold wings of poesy affect - - - Wor. 241 

— the day of my destiny's over Byron 224 ; Poe 44 

— the last glimpse of Erin with sorrow I see Moore 217 

— the mills of G-od grind slowly - - - Lon. 94 

— the torrents from their fountains - - Wor. 153 

— this be madness yet there is method - - Sha. 822 

— thou never hast sought to divine it - - Mer. 281 

— 'tis all but a dream - Moore 534 

— to give timely warning and deter — a sonnet Wor. 443 

— veiled in spires of myrtle wreath - - Col. 211 

— watery deserts hold apart - Hoi. 255 

— women's minds, like winter winds - Burns 229 

— young no more, we still would dream - Hoi. 170 
Thought, A. (Une pensee. Hood.) - - - Flo. 163 

— for a deathbed — a sonnet - Bro. 86 



KA.*7 Though 

^* * Threnody 

Thought, Ode to - - - - - - White 337 

— over a cradle Wil. 77 

Thoughts. (Bailey.) Fav. 224 

— divine inspire a thirst unquenchable - Eog. 186 

— on banks of Nith - - - - - - Wor. 253 

— on Oct. 1, 1781 Sch. 319 

— on the seasons Wor. 430 

Thou'rt bearing hence thy roses - - - Hem. 344 

— gone ! — thou'rt slumbering low - - - Hem. 404 

— passing hence, my brother ! Hem. 229 

— welcome in my box to peep - - - - Sch. 279 

— welcome, lovely stripling ! - Sch. 46 
Thou's welcome wean ! mishanter fa' me Burns 102 
Thousand minstrels woke within me - - Erne. 58 
Thracian, The. (Bourne.) - Cow. 599 
Thrash away, you'll hev to rattle - - - Low. 169 
Thrasymene, Near lake — a sonnet - - - Wor. 314 
Threatening signs - - - - - - Goe. 239 

Threats come which no submission may assuage Wor. 366 

Three days before our lord Muhammad P. of F. 164 

— days they lay in ambush at my gate - - Rog. 132 

— bells, The ------ - Whi. 379 

— cottage girls, The ------ Wor. 301 

— doctors, The Moore 630 

— evenings in a life Pro. 300 

— friends of mine— a sonnet - Lon. 364 

— gentle shepherds ----..*- Pope 381 

— gifts the dying left me - - Bro. 93 

— graves, The ■ - Col. 184 

— innocents lie buried here - - - - Wes. 158 

— jolly pigeons— a song - - - - - Gol. 281 

— kings, The ------- Lon. 378 

— misbegotten knaves in Kendal green - - Sha. 392 

— pairs of dimpled arms, as white as snow Fav. 237 

— palinodias Goe. 241 

— persons there are Wes. 225 

— poets in three distant ages born - - - Dry. 320 

— roses - Pro. 257 

— rulers, The - - Pro. 46 

— shadows Ros. 288 

— silences of Molinos, The— a sonnet - - Lon. 382 

— silences there are : the first of speech - Lon. 382 

— sonnets to a coquette Ten. 391 

— words of mighty moment - - - - Sch. 242 

— years she grew in sun and shower - - Wor. 171 
Threefold Pro. 387 

— is the march of time ----- Sch. 244 
Threnodia - Low. 1 

— Augustalis - Dry. 181 ; Gol. 151 
Threnody Erne. 130 



^. enos 548 

Threnos — beauty, truth and rarity — an epitaph Sha. 1054 

Thrice happy she ! that is so well assured - Spe. 697 

— is he armed that hath his quarrel just - Sha. 513 

— to the holly brake ----- Scott 425 

— welcome to thy sisters of the east - - Whi. 123 
Thrift, Horatio ! the funeral baked meats - Sha. 814 
Thrive, gentle plant ! and weave a bower - Cow. 499 
Throckmorton, Mrs., To - Cow. 471 
Throckmorton's bullfinch, Mrs. - - - Cow. 457 
Throne of expression ! whence the spirit's ray Hem. 326 

— verse, The - - - - - - P. of F. 33 

Thrones and imperial powers, offspring of - Mil. 44 

— dominations, princedoms, virtues Mil. 129, 131, 235 
Through and through the inspired leaves - Burns 182 

— cloudless skies in silvery sheen - - Byron 234 

— death to love— a sonnet - Ros. 247 

— Erin's isle ------ Moore 241 

— field and wood to stray - Goe. 26 

— God, as one that is an householder - - Eos. 264 

— grief and through danger thy smile hath Moore 231 

— heat and cold, and shower and sun - - Whi. 114 

— Manchester square took a canter just now Moore 325 

— me you pass into the city of woe - - Dante 8 

— nature up to nature's God - Pope 219 

— rain, through snow ----- Q e. 55 

— shattered galleries ... Wor. 243 

— suffering and sorrow thou hast passed - Low. 19 

— tattered clothes small vices do appear - Sha. 872 

— that celestial forest whose thick shade Dante 218 

— the blue and frosty heavens - - - Pro. 21 

— the darkness. (W. Winter.) - - - Fav. 297 

— the fields. (Wm. Sawyer.) - - - Flo. 125 

— the long hall the shuttered windows - - Whi. 175 

— the wide world he only is alone - - Rog. 205 

— the wide world thy children raise - - Pro. 366 

— the world which the Spirit - - - Sch. 34 

— thick and thin, both over bank and bush - Spe. 199 

— thy battlements, Newstead, the hollow - Byron 131 

— thy clear, clear spaces, Lord, of old - - Whi. 166 

— two blent souls one rapturous undersong Ros. 233 

— weeds, and thorns, and matted underwood Col. 152 
Throw away Thy rod Her. 281 

— physic to the dogs Sha. 807 

— up the window ! Wil. 284 

Thrush, On hearing a ... - Burns 141 

— The. (Burns.) - Flo. 317 

Thule, King of— a ballad Goe. 109 

Thun, lake of, Memorial near - Wor. 295 

Thunder-storm, Composed during a - Byron 233 

— On a - Scott 373 



549 ^ enos 

Thurio, c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - - Sha. 21 
Thurlow, Edward, Promotion of - - - Cow. 390 
Thus aged men, full loth and slow - - - Scott 210 

— all things lead to charity, secured - - Wor. 379 

— by their leader's care each martial band - Iliad 97 

— can my love excuse the slow offense — a sonnet Sha. 1034 

— closed the tale of guilt and glccm - - Lon. 267 

— conscience does make cowards of us all - Sha. 826 

— did Soame Jenyns — though a Tory - Moore 575 

— far into the bowels of the - Sha. 587 

— far my scanty brain has built the rhyme - Col. 45 

— far, O friend ! have we, tho' leaving much Wor. 509 

— far of tillage, and of heavenly signs - - Vir. 68 

— followed soft and lasting peace - - I. S. S. 65 

— gentle audience, since your ear - - - Mer. 324 

— humbled in the dust, the pensive train - Iliad 451 

— I clothe my naked villainy - Sha. 563 

— I lift the sash, so long - Hoi. 241 

— if thou wilt prove me, dear - Bro. 115 

— is his cheek the map of days outworn - Sha. 1036 

— is the storm abated by the craft - - - Wor. 365 

— Italy was moved — nor did the chief - Cow. 535 

— joyful Troy maintained the watch of night Iliad 2(f2 

— let me live, unseen, unknown - - - Pope 358 

— like the rage of fire the combat burns - Iliad 376 

— lingered Krishna in the deep, green wood I. S. S. 24 

— long my grief has kept me dumb - - Dry. 181 

— may I humbly hide my face - Wes. 241 

— o'er the rolling surge the vessel flies - Odys. 172 

— ran the student's pleasant rhyme - - Lon. 298 

— roll I, never taking ease - - - Goe. 222 

— round Pelides breathing war and blood - Iliad 405 

— safely low, my friend, thou canst not fall Tho. 447 

— saith the Lord ------ Hoi. 251 

— says the prophet of the Turk - - - Cow. 389 

— spake the goddess of the fearless eye - Tho. 213 

— still whene'er the good and just - - - Bry. 36 

— they in lowliest plight, repentant stood - Mil. 252 

— to be chained forever, can I bear? - - Goe. 214 

— to their bulwarks, smit with panic fear - Iliad 436 

— to be lost and thus to sink and die - - She. 405 

— we from bridge to bridge with other talk Dante 70 

— we play the fools ----- Sha. 417 

— when I shun Scylla ----- Sha. 196 

— you the sad catastrophe have seen - - Dry. 522 
Thy bosom is endeared with all hearts— a sonnet Sha. 1032 

— bower is finished, fairest - Bry. 118 

— cheek is pale with thought, but not from Byron 254 

— country, Wilberf orce, with just disdain - Cow. 488 

— country's curse is on thee, darkest crest - She. 407 



3gJ 550 

Thy craven fear my truth accused - - Scott 425 

— dark eyes opened not Ten. 26 

— days are done - - - - - - Byron 192 

— debtor at Thy feet I fall - Wes. 295 

— dewy looks sink in my breast — a fragment She. 500 

— Divinity's adorer ------ Wes. 327 

— error, Fremont, simply was to act - - Whi. 263 

— face looks up from every sea - - - Wil. 256 

— fields, propitious Pales, I rehearse - - Yir. 87 

— foes had quit thee with their dead array - Hem. 104 

— foes to hunt, thy enviers - - - - Erne. 249 

— forests, Windsor ! and thy green retreats - Pope 96 

— functions are ethereal ... - Wor. 210 

— gentle spirit now is fled - - - White 233 

— gift, thy tables are within my brain - Sha. 1043 

— glass will show thee how thy beauties wear Sha. 1037 

— gracious ear, O Lord, incline - - - Mil. 500 

— harp may sing of Troy's alarms - - Moore 36 

— heart is in the upper world - - - Hem. 213 

— hue, dear pledge, is pure and bright - - Scott 406 

— judgments, Lord, are just - White 349 

— land to favor graciously - Mil. 499 

— little footsteps on the sands - - - She. 504 

— love thou sentest oft to me - Low. 76 

— mansion is the Christian's heart - - Cow. 62 

— old groans ring yet ----- Sha. 722 

— relics, Kowe, to this fair urn we trust - Pope 344 

— rest was deep at the slumberer's hour - Hem. 140 

— sacred succor, Arethusa, bring - - Vir. 49 

— song has taught my heart to feel - Moore 100 

— soul shall find itself alone - - - - Poe 164 

— summer voice, Musketaquit - - - - Erne. 213 

— trivial harp will never please - - - Erne. 106 

— tuwhits are lull'd, I wot - Ten. 11 

— very stones prate of my whereabout - Sha. 793 

— voice across my spirit falls - Mer. 454 

— voice is in mine ear, beloved - - - Hem. 219 

— voice is like a fountain Low. 8 

— voice is on the rolling air - - - - Ten. 216 

— voice prevails, dear friend - Hem. 200 

— voice was in my soul ----- Hem. 221 

— wife is destined to deceive thee - - - Sch. 312 

— will be done ------ Whi. 261 

— wish was father Harry ----- Sha. 432 

— word, O God, as right and just - - Wes. 251 

— youth May moon is beaming, love - Moore 243 
Thyreus, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - - Sha. 911 
Thyrsis, the music of that murmuring spring Pope 37 
Thyrza, To ------ - Byron 246 

Thyself and thy belongings ... - Sha. 67 



Tib, a country wife, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

Tibbie Dunbar — a song ... - Burns 222 

Tiber, Nile and Thames — a sonnet - - Eos. 297 

Tibullus, Imitation of - Byron 133 

Tide rises, The, the tide falls - - - Lon. 400 

Tides, The ----- - Bry . 252 ; Lon. 367 

Tiefenbach, c. in The Piccolomini - - Col. 407 

Tighe, Mrs. Henry, To Moore 184 

Till Peter's keys some christened Jove adorn Pope 154 

— tired he sleeps, and life's poor play is o'er - Pope 201 
Tilsbury vale, The ------ Wor. 483 

Tim Turpin -------- Hood 546 

Timandra, c. in Timon of Athens - - - Sha. 741 

Timbuctoo -------- Ten. 457 

Time Her. 210; Mil. 414; Scott 402; She. 436; White 380 

— and its changes. (Bailey.) - - - - Fav. 308 

— and the hour runs through - - - Sha. 790 

— flies ; it is his melancholy task - - - Wor. 667 

— hath, my lord, a wallet - Sha. 639 

— hope, and memory - - Hood 175 ; Fav. 319 

— I've lost in wooing ----- Moore 251 

— incessantly hasteneth on Sch. 249 

— is out of joint - Sha. 819 

— long past ------- She. 434 

— never wandering from his annual round Cow. 562 

— Night Thoughts. (Young.) - - - - Fav. 311 

— on whose arbitrary wing - Byron 251 

— piece, The. (Task.) ----- Cow. 265 

— real and imaginary ----- Col. 87 

— rolls his ceaseless course ... - Scott 126 

— shall unfold what plaited cunning hides Sha. 849 

— The, an autumnal evening - Col. 36 

— To ------- Byron 246, 251 

— travels in divers paces ----- Sha. 217 

— was when I was free as air - - - Cow. 396 

— was when thy golden chain of flowers - Flo. 209 

— will rust the sharpest sword - - - Scott 312 
Times are as naught, to-morrow it will - L. of A. 151 

— without number have I prayed - - Wes. 244 
Timon of Athens — a tragedy - Sha. 741 
Timur Nameh. (Divan, vii.) - - - Goe. 371 
Tintern abbey, Lines at Wor. 187 
Tired of play ! tired of play ! - Wil. 78 

— of all these, for restful death I cry — a sonnet Sha. 1036 
Tirocinium ; or, A review of schools - - Cow. 366 
'Tis a bleak wild hill ------ Bry. 109 

— a consummation devoutly to be wished - Sha. 826 

— a dark-purple moonlighted midnight - - Mer. 207 

— a fault to heaven ----- gha. 813 

— a little thing. (Talfourd.) - Fav. 41 



'Tis 



552 



'Tis a naughty night to swim - - - Sha. 864 

— a wild life, fearful and full of change - - Rog. 128 

— a woodland enchanted -_""-'. Low. 359 

— all thou art and all the proud shall be - Pope 92 

— an old tale and often told - Scott 61 

— as easy as lying ------ gha. 830 

— believed that this harp which I wake - Moore 233 

— better to be lowly born ----- Sha. 602 

— better to be vile than vile esteemed - * Sha. 1042 

— Christmas eve — full plain ... - Flo. 307 

— difficult to feel that she is dead - - Wil. 289 

— done and shivering in the gale - - Byron 232 

— done — but yesterday a king ! Byron 197 

— done ! — I saw it in my dreams - - Byron 167 

— early dawn — and all around - - - Fav. 254 

— easier for a wreath to bind - G-oe. 261 

— education forms the common mind - - Pope 228 

— eight o'clock, — a clear March night - - Wor. 119 

— ended ! welcome ! 'tis ended - - - Seh. 322 

— evening now ; the heats and cares of day Moore 167 

— finished, 'tis done !----'- Wes. 141 

— folly all — let ms no more be told - - - Cow. 612 

— friendship's pledge, my young fair - Burns 145, 265 

— from high life high characters are drawn - Pope 227 

— gone and forever : - Moore 252 

— gone with old belief and dream - - - Wor. 202 

— hard, my friend, to write in such an age Dry. 284 

— hard to say, if greater want of skill - - Pope 41 

— hard upon the dawn, and yet - - - Mer. 224 

— he whose yester-evening's high disdain - Wor. 248 

— heaven alone that is given away - - Low. 107 

— holy time, The evening shade - - - Flo. 385 

— lack of kindly warmth - Sha. 749 

— late at night, and in the realm of sleep - Lon. 321 

— liberty alone that gives the flower - - Cow. 331 

— like stirring living embers when, at eighty Hoi. 300 

— love that murmurs in my breast - - Moore 36 

— merry in greenwood— thus runs the old lay Scott 316 

— merry, 'tis merry in good greenwood - - Scott 137 

— midnight deep— I came but now - - Wil. 271 

— midnight, — On the globe dead slumber sits White 347 

— midnight the lone mountains on - - Wil. 63 

— midnight : through my troubled dream - Hoi. 216 

— mine, and I will have it - Sha. 198 

— moonlight over Oman's sea - - - Moore 426 

— morning, and the sun with ruddy orb - Cow. 321 

— morning. Let us wander through the fields Rog. 82 

— much desired, you judges of the town - Dry. 477 

— my happiness below Cow. 74 

— my vocation, Hal Sha. 384 



553 'Tis 

'Tis neither here nor there - Sha. 904 

— night, in silence looking down - - - Wor. 344 

— noon. At noon the Hebrew bowed the knee Bry. 205 

— not alone my inky cloak - Sha. 813 

— not for man to trifle ----- Fav. 272 

— not for the unfeeling, the falsely refined Wor. 483 

— not in the bond Sha. 199 

— not that I design to rob - Cow. 42 

— not the loss of love's assurance - - - Cam. 229 

— not the many oaths ----- Sha. 271 

— not with gilded sabres Bry. 14G 

— now the dead of night " - - - Whi. 221 

— now the very witching time of night - - Sha. 830 

— of the father Hilary - - - - - Eos. Ill 

— only noble to be good Ten. 42 

— over ; and her lovely cheek is now - - Eog. 118 

— past : the iron north has spent his rage - Fav. 315 

— phrase absurd to call a villain great - Pope 216 

— pleasant, sure, to see one's name in print Byron 178 

— Providence alone secures - - - - Cow. 393 

— said — but whether true or not - - Moore 649 

— said, fantastic ocean doth enfold - - Wor. 292 

— said that in the Holy Land - - - - Whi. 129 

— said that some have died for love - - Wor. 105 

— said that to the brow of yon fair hill - - Wor. 246 

— said, when Schiller's death drew nigh - Bry. 184 

— scarcely two hours since - - - Moore 318 

— slander, whose edge is sharper - - Sha. 958 

— spent — this burning day of June - - - Wor. 159 

— strange how like a very dunce - - - Hood 554 

— strange, the miser should his cares employ Pope 254 

— strange, what awkward figures and odd Hood 549 

— summer eve, when heaven's ethereal bow - Fav. 157 

— sung in ancient minstrelsy - - - Flo. 154 

— sweet, in the green spring - Bry. 139 

— sweet to behold when the billows are - Moore 298 

— sweet to fight our battles o'er - - - Hoi. 145 

— sweet to him who all the week - - - Col. 163 

— sweet to love in childhood - Flo. 52 

— sweet to think ------ Moore 230 

— sweeter for thee desppdring - - - Burns 287 

— the curse of service. Preferment goes - Sha. 879 

— the eye of childhood that fears a painted devil Sha. 794 

— the heart's current lends the cup its glow Hoi. 48 

— the last rose of summer - Moore 243 ; Flo. 103 

— the middle of the night by the castle clock Col. 118 

— the noon of the spring time - Whi. 167 

— the terror of tempest. The rags of the sail She. 461 

— the warm south where Europe spreads her Eliot 143 

— the witching hour of night - - - Keats 271 



"Tig 
To 



554 



'Tis thine to pity and forgive - - - Burns 181 

— thy muse's delight to sing God's pity - Sch. 269 

— time, I feel, to leave thee low - - Moore 189 

— toil must help us to forget - Mer. 212 

— true, Idoloclastes Satyrane ! - - - - Col. 172 

— true, my fading years decline - - - Moore 46 

— true, my lord, 1 gave my word - - - Pope 506 

— true, 'tis pity ; and pity - Sha. 821 

— very hard when men forsake - - - Hood 559 

— well said again ------ Sha. 609 

— well — that man to all the varying states - Cra. 469 

— well to woo, 'tis well to wed - - - Fav. 234 

— when the cup is smiling - - - Moore 534 

— with our judgments as our watches - Pope 41 

— written in the chapter "of the Cave " - P. of F. 149 

— written that the serving angels - - P. of F. 17 
Titan ! to whose immortal eyes - - Byron 263 
Titania, c. in Midsummer-night's Dream - Sha. 161 
Tither morn, The — a song - - - Burns 244 
Tithing-time at Stock ------ Cow. 453 . 

Tithonus -------- Ten. 383 

Titian, c. in Michelangelo Lon. 444 

Titinius, c. in Julius Caesar - Sha. 764 

Titmouse, The - Erne. 200 

Titus Andronicus — an historical play - - Sha. 688 

Titus — Destruction of Jerusalem - - Byron 195 

— Lartius, c. in Coriolanus - - - - Sha. 654 

— c. in Timon of Athens ----- Sha. 741 
Tityrus and Melibceus— a pastoral - - Vir. 13 

— thou in the shade of a spreading beech-tree Lon. 386 

To - Moore 90, 102, 108, 135, 175, 207 

To Poe 74, 107, 165 ; Rog. 243, 251 

To - Moore 124, 155, 189, 193, 195 

To 's picture ------ Moore 162 

— a good man of most dear memory - - Wor. 495 

— all and singular in this full meeting - - Dry. 511 

— all that breathe the airs of heaven - - Moore 35 

— all the spirits of love that wander - - Eos. 230 

— all those happy blessings, which ye have Spe. 698 

— all, to each, a fair good-night - - - Scott 106 

— an apple-woman's stall - - - - Goe. 240 

— appease the gods ; or public thanks to yield Wor. 303 

— Archimedes once came a youth - - Sch. 247 

— Babylon's proud waters brought - - - Cow. 512 

— barren heath, bleak moor and quaking fen Wor. 265 

— bathe in fiery floods ----- Sha. 78 

— be a flower ! which would you be - - Flo. 321 

— be a sweetness more desired than spring - Ros. 254 

— be honest as this world goes, is to be one Sha. 822 

— be like a fish, brisk and quick - - - Goe. 30 






555 



To 



To be once in doubt is once to be resolved - Sha. 894 

— be or not to be : that is the question ! Sha. 826 ; Fav. 98 

— be remembered thus is fame - Cow. 506 

— be the theme of every hour - Moore 124 

— bear, to nurse, to rear - Fav. 379 

— beguile many and be beguiled - - - Sha. 900 

— Berkeley every virtue under heaven - Pope 327 

— break one's word is pleasure-fraught - - Goe. 46 

— broken been the statutes hie in heaven - Cha. 600 

— business that we love we rise betime - - Sha. 933 

— catch the thought by painting's spell - Moore 163 

— clothe the fiery thought ... - Erne. 239 

— Daunton me — a song - Burns 216, 324 

— day, dearest ! is ours -'-.'-'- Moore 655 

— day death seems to me an infant child - Ros. 275 

— day the plant by Williams set - - - Whi. 355 

— die : to sleep ; no more - - - Sha. 826 

— do a great right, do Sha. 199 

— do or not to do ; to have - Wes. 359 

— E. L. on his travels in Greece - - - Ten. Ill 

— err is human, to forgive divine - - Pope 54 

— every class we have a school assigned - Cra. 477 

— every form of being is assigned " - - Wor. 697 

— farmer Moss, in Langar vale, came down Cra. 70 

— fight the battle of the cross - - - Pro. 357 

— fret thy soule with crosses and with cares Spe. 608 

— gild refined gold, to paint the lily - - Sha. 347 

— give a cup of water ; yet its draught - - Fav. 41 

— God our strength sing loud and clear - Mil. 493 

— grass, or leaf, or fruit, or wall - - - Cow. 609 

— Greece we give our shining blades - - Moore 659 

— happy convents bosomed deep in vines - Pope 173 

— have an itching palm ----- Sha. 780 

— hear the sea-maid's music - Sha. 165 

— her who has hopes of me - Wil. 270 

— him, who, in the love of nature holds - - Bry. 21 

— him whose loyal, brave, and gentle heart Cam. 225 

— hope he listens wandering - Rog. 192 

— horse ! to horse ! brave cavaliers ! - - Mac. 205 

— horse ! to horse ! the standard - - - Scott 373 

— J. S. Ten. 55 

•-- Jesus, the crown of my hope - - - Cow. 95 

— keep her slender fingers from the sun - Flo. 168 

— keep the lamp alive ----- Cow. 92 

— kneeling worshipers no earthly floor - Wor. 378 

— ladies' eyes a round, boy - - - Moore 259 

— languish for his native air - - Wes. 45 

— lay the soul that loves him low - - - Cow. 632 
' — leave this keen encounter of our wits - Sha. 559 

— look upon a work of rare device - - - Spe. 25 



"JLO 

To-morrow 



556 



To love and to be loved again - - - Eog. 

— love in rny heart - Cam. 

— love, the soft and blooming child - - Moore 

— me, fair friend, you never can be old - - Sha. 

— me it speaks of loveliness - Flo. 

— me the meanest flower that blows can give Wor. 

— me what are riches encumbered with care Burns 

— no one muse does she her glance incline Moore 

— observations which ourselves we make - Pope 

— Oggier spake king Didier -.--'» Mac. 

— one fair lady out of court - - - Pope 

— praise thy author, soul, do not forget - Tho. 

— praise thy life, or wail thy worthy death - Spe. 

— prize the breath we share with human kind Wor. 

— public notice with reluctance strong - - Wor. 

— purify their wine some people bleed - Cow. 

— rest, the cushion and soft dean invite - Pope 

— rest the weary nurse has gone - - - Bro. 

— Riddel, much-lamented man - - Burns 

— say this comedy pleased long ago - - Dry. 

— see her is to love her - Burns 

— see thee every day that came - - - Moore 

— seek the beauteous eye of heaven - - Sha. 

— shallow rivers, to whose falls - Sha. 

— sigh, yet feel no pain - Moore 

— speed to-day, to be put back to-morrow - Spe. 

— stranger use in the far west - Pro. 

— strive and fail. Yes, I did strive and fail Ing. 

— tell the Savior all my wants - - - - Cow. 

— the belfry, one by one, went the - - Bro. 

— the deep, to the deep. Down, down ! - - She. 

— the glory that was Greece - Poe 

— the God of all sure mercies, let my blessing Whi. 

— the grave one day from a house they bore Goe. 

— the ground with solemn - Flo. 

— the great archer, not to him - - - Goe. 

— the manner born ------ Sha. 

— the mother I give, for the daughter 1 live Goe. 

— the strand quick L mount the bark ! - - Goe. 

— the temple of the Lord - Wes. 
the people of England, the humble petition Moore 

Bry. 

- Sch. 
Whi. 

- Mer. 
Burns 
■ Spe. 
Moore 

- Pope 
Pope 



— the town of Atienza 

— the tyrant Dionys Mceros once hied - 

— the winds give our banner ! 

— thee be all men heroes : every race 

— thee, loved Nith, thy gladsome plains 

— thee, that art the summer's nightingale 

— thee, the queen of nymphs divine - 

— thee, we wretches of the Houyhnhnm 

— Thee, whose temple is all space 



231 

276 

55 
1040 

83 
500 
321 
645 
224 
204 
378 
380 
641 
657 
494 
432 
258 

36 
183 
508 
234 
197 
347 

52 
299 
608 
179 

13 

82 
276 
235 
169 

28 
239 
181 

43 
816 
261 
153 
181 
631 
145 
155 

32 
442 
268 

28 

56 
394 
222 



557 



To 
To-morrow 



To thine own self be true and it must follow Sha. 816 

— thirst and to find no fill — a fragment - She. 502 

— this sad shrine, whoe'er thou art ! - - Pope 343 

— those we love we've drank to-night - - Moore 606 

— those who love the Lord I speak - - - Cow. 74 

— throw a perfume on the violet - - - Sha. 347 

— trace the Kilmansegg pedigree - - - Hood 187 

— transmute crime to wisdom ... Erne. 275 

— traverse hills and dales is vain - - - Wes. 277 

— unpathed waters, undreamed shores - Sha. 324 

— vanish in the chinks that time has made - Rog. 156 

— wake the soul by tender strokes of art - Pope 92 

— warn, to comfort and command - - - Wor. 171 

— watch the storms, and hear the sky - Cow. 403 

— weary hearts, to mourning homes - - Whi. 96 

— what am I reserved? Great God - - Wes. 89 

— what base uses we may return - - - Sha. 841 

— whom shall I my evil case complain - Spe. 586 

— win the secret of a weed's plain heart - - Low. 25 

— win us to our harm ----- Sha. 790 

— write a verse or two, is all the praise - - Her. 144 

— write me down an ass - Sha. 128 

— yon streamlet's rippling flow - - White 230 

— you my purse and to none other wight - Cha. 601 

— you, right noble lord, whose careful breast Spe. 25 

— you who live in chill degree - Dry. 277 

— youth, to age alike, this tablet pale - - Scott 452 

Toadstool, The Hoi. 73 

Toast, The Burns 184 

— The. (Scott.) - Fav. 309 

— to Miss Lewars - - - - •• - Burns 188 

— to Wilkie Collins ------ Hoi. 263 

Todlen hame," Remarks on - Burns 332 

Tofts, Mrs., On - Pope 375 

Together at the altar we - Goe. 39 

— let us beat this ample field - Pope 187 
Toggenburg, Knight of - - - - - Sch. 165 
Token of friendship true and tried - - - Whi. 64 

— The Low. 44 

Toledo, Archbishop of, c. in Spanish Student - Lon. 44 

Toll for the brave ------ Cow. 414 

Tom Cribb to Big Ben, Epistle from - Moore 614 

Tomb in Ghent, A ----- Pro. 75 

— of madame Langhans, The - - - - Hem. 224 
Tombless epitaph, A Col. 172 

Tombs of Platea, The Hem. 317 

To-morrow - - - She. 440 

— (from the Spanish) Lon. 16 

— is a day too fair Mer. 241 

— '"Tis late at night" Lon. 321 



To-morrow 
Tread 



558 



To-morrow, my true king, I offered free from 

stain Mac. 198 

— night - She. 436 

— I'll have my friar-let me think - - - Keats 276 

— she will dance at the palace - - - Mer. 454 

— this sunset spreads two golden - - - Ros. 286 
Tongue nor heart cannot conceive - - Sha. 795 
Tongues in trees, books in the - Sha. 210 
Tony Lumpkin, c. in She Stoops to Conquer Gol. 270 
Too early seen unknown ----- Sha. 719 

— fair for praise — too modest to believe it - Byron 255 

— frail to keep the lofty vow - Wor. 253 

— hard a keeping oath ----- Sha. 135 

— late - - - Pro. 224 

— like the lightning which - - - Sha. 720 

— many, Lord, abuse thy grace - Cow. 91 

— much of a good thing ----- Sha. 222 

— much ye tremble, too much fear - - P. of F. 91 

— swift arrives as tardy as too slow - - Sha. 725 

— too prophetic did thy wild note swell - White 225 
Toothache, Address to the - Burns 118 
Torbolton lasses, The ----- Burns 33 

Torch of liberty, The Moore 572 

Torches were blazing clear - Hem. 138 

Torn from your parent bough - Ros. 143 

— hat, The Wil. 282 

Torquemada ------- Lon. 264 

Torrent at Devil's Bridge, To the — a sonnet - Wor. 243 

— of light and river of the air - - - Lon. 366 
Torrey, C. T., Death of - -Low. 104 

— S. O., On the death of -.-.-- Whi. 134 

Torso, Tc fragment of the Rog. 245 

Tostig, earl of Northumbria - - - - Ten. 615 

T'other night, after hearing lord Dudley's Moore 619 

Touched by the pathos of these rhymes - Lon. 313 

— meekly at the skirts of brotherhood - L. of A. 145 
Touchstone, c. in As You Like It - - - Sha. 205 

Tours, John of Ros. 139 

Tours, Marguerite de - - - - Rog. 24 

Toussaint L'Overture ------ Whi. 41 

Toussaint, the most unhappy man of man ! Wor. 271 

Tower of famine, The- ----- She. 433 

— of Prometheus ------ Lon. 342 

— of Tell at Altorf Wor. 297 

Town and country child. (Allan Cunningham.) Flo. 339 

— of Schwytz, The— a sonnet - - - Wor. 297 
Trades - Cra. 366 

— and professions " — these are themes the muse Cra. B51 
Tradition — a sonnet Wor. 331 

— be thou mute ) Wor. 385 



xxq To-morrow 

OOV Tread 

Tradition, Fancy and — a sonnet ... Wor. 389 

Trafalgar, Last three from — a sonnet - - Ros. 297 
Tragedies. See Plays. 

Tragedy, Remarks on White 419 

Tragic fragment Burns 33 

Trailing arbutus, The ----- Whi. 211 

Trained in the holy art whose lifted shield - Hoi. 300 

Trajan, Pillar of ----- - Wor. 320 

Tranent Muir," Remarks on - - - Burns 315 

Tranio, c. in Taming of the Shrew - - Sha. 229 

Tranquillity ! — a sonnet ------- Wor. 408 

— Ode to - - - - - - - - Col. 197 

— thou better name - Col. 197 

Transfigured life — a sonnet - Ros. 256 

Translation from Ariosto - - - - - Scott 415 

— from Horace Byron 133 

— from Medea of Euripides - Byron 152 

— from Ovid - - - - Cow. 548 

— from Plautus - Mac. 212 

— of Greek war-song ----- Byron 244 

— psalm 137 - - - Byron 264 ; Cow. 512 
Translations - - - Erne. 244 ; Pope 405 ; She. 509 
Translations - Lon. 11, 92, 336, 386, 412 

— from Boccaccio ------ Dry. 434 

— from Catullus Byron 132 

— from French of Mme. Guy on - - - Cow. 612 

— from Gay's fables ------ Cow. 647 

— from Horace Cow. 533 

— from Italian poets Cow. 596 

— from Peter Ronsard ----- Mer. 237 

— from Virgil ------- Cow. 535 

— of Milton's Latin and Italian poems - - Cow. 554 

— of Portuguese sonnets ----- Bro. 152 
— of Romaic songs ----- Byron 244, 251 

Translator's apology ----- - Sch. 11 

Transmigration (anon.) Flo. 322 

Transparent appears the radiant air - - Goe. 256 

Transplant the beauteous tree ! - - - Goe. 160 

Transubstantiation — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 364 

Trappings and the suits of woe - - - Sha. 813 

Travel, In ■ - - - - - - - - Mer. 463 

Traveler and fair maiden— a ballad - - Goe. 126 

— at the source of the Nile - Hem. 348 

— on thy journey toiling ... - Whi. 36 

— regret me not ; for thou shalt find - - Cow. 517 

— The - Gol. 69 

Traveler's book at Orchomenus, In - - Byron 243 

Travels by the fireside Lon. 359 

Travers, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 409 

Tread aside from my starry bloom ! - - Flo. 376 



Tread K/>r> 

Trust «JDU 

Tread lightly here, for here, 'tis said - - Rog. 341 

Treadmill song, The ----- Hoi. 10 

Treasure-digger, The — a ballad - Goe. 115 

Treasures - - Pro. 66 

— of the deep, The Hem. 338 

Trebonius, c. in Julius Caesar - - - Sha. 764 

Tree-burial - Bry. 330 

Tree of liberty, The Burns 144 

Trees in groves, kine in droves - - - - Erne. 114 

— of the garden — a sonnet - Ros. 270 

— Spirit of the ------- Bro. 187 

Tremble, kings despised of man - - - She. 567 

— thou wretch, that hast ----- Sha. 862 
Trembling poplar. See Aspen. 

Trent, Sonnet to the river - White 311 

Trepidation of the Druids— a sonnet - - Wor. 354 

Trestria, sed longe distantia, saecula vates - Cow. 599 

Tres video partes, quo re distinctius utar - Her. 560 

Tressel, c. in Richard hi. Sha. 556 

Triad, The ------- Wor. 199 

Trial - - Low. 48 

— of faith- - Wes. 21 

— of the army, The Iliad 70 

Triamond, Legend of Spe. 281 

Tributary stream — a sonnet - - - Wor. 331 

— verses - - - White 209 

Tribute to a dog - - Wor. 420 

Trick of singularity ----- Sha. 291 

Triermain, Bridal of ----- - Scott 230 

Trifles - Moore 320 ; Sch. 263 

— light as air are to the jealous - - - Sha. 895 

Trilogy of passion Goe. 200 

Trinculo, c. in Tempest Sha. 1 

Trinitas - Whi. 239 

Trinity, On the - Wes. 225 

— Sunday Her. 152 

Trisanku, King - Lon. 378 

Tristram of Lestovet Tay. 232 

Tritemius, Gift of ------ Whi. 235 

Triumph of heavenly love. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 618 

— of life — a fragment She. 493 

— of love -------- Sch. 48 

— of time - Pro. 156 

Triumphal arch, that fill'st the sky - - - Cam. 162 

Troilus and Cressida — an historical play - Sha. 622 

(modernized) Wor. 478 

Prologue to - Dry. 489 

Troops, Sura of P. of F. 168 

Trosachs, The — a sonnet ... - Wor. 384 

Trot, John — a ballad Hood 579 



561 



Tread 
Trust 



Troubadour and Richard Coeur de Lion - Hem. 117 

— song - - - - - - - - - Hem. 385 

— The - . - Scott 397 

Troubled long with warring notions - - Wor. 469 

Troubles of Charles I. — a sonnet - - - Wor. 371 

Troy town -------- Ros. 19 

Truce of Piscataqua, The - - . - - Whi. 231 

True and false comforts Cow. 89 

— aristocrat. (Stewart.) -..--- Fav. 76 

— as becometh a Switzer, I watch - - - Sch. 273 

— be it said, whatever man it said - - Spe. 339 

— beauty dwells in deep retreats - - - Wor. 106 

— Brahmin in the morning - Erne. 239 

— ease in writing comes from art - - - Pope 50 

— enjoyment — a song ----- Goe. 36 

— friend, Epigram on a - - - - - Cow. 517 

— friendship is a scarce and chary plant - Fa v. 66 

— genius, but true woman ! Bro. 89 

— happiness had no localities - - - Fav. 269 

— hearted was he, the sad swain - - Burns 251 
■ — honors -------- Pro. 35 

— hope is swift, and flies Sha. 587 

— hymn, A - Her. 269 

• — I talk of dreams Sha. 717 

— incident ------- Wil. 88 

— is it that Ambrosio Salinero - - - - Wor. 487 

— love is at home on a carpet - - - Wil. 193 

— love is but a humble low-born thing - - Low. 7 

— love that ever shows itself as clear - - Dante 292 

— love's the gift which God has given - - Scott 31 

— loyal natives, The — an epigram - - Burns 185 

— measure of life. (Bailey.) --■-'.- Fav. 253 

— or false - Pro. 195 

— pleasures -------- Cow. 84 

— story, A ------ - Hood 509 

— Thomas lay on Huntlie bank - - - Scott 338 

— wit has seen its best days long ago - - Dry. 487 

— wit is nature to advantage dressed - - Pope 48 

— woman — three sonnets - Ros. 254 
Trumbull, Sir William, Epitaph on - - - Pope 342 
Trumpet, The - - Hem. 357; Fav. 100; P. of F. 130 
Trust --------- Whi. 170 

— him little who doth raise - Pro. 279 

— in immortality ------ g c h. 313 

— me, no mere skill of subtle tracery - - Pro. 255 

— me, the meed of praise dealt thriftily - - Cow. 40 

— me, 'tis not a mere tale - Sch. 259 

— no agent -------- Sha. 116 

— no future howe'er pleasant ! Lon. 3 

— not the treason of those smiling looks - Spe. 695 

38 



Truth 
'Twas 



562 



Truth Cow. 117; Lon. 94 

— and all truth He is ! - - - - P. of F. Ill 

— and divine love. (Mme. Guyon.) - - Cow. 619 

— crushed to earth shall rise again - - - Bry. 182 

— forever on the scaffold, wrong forever on the Low. 68 

— Fount of - Mer. 242 

— is the speech of inward purity - - L. of A. 161 

— of woman — a song Scott 449 

— The P. of F. Ill 

Truths Hoi. 200 

— divine came mended from that tongue - Pope 110 

Tryst with death, A Pro. 127 

Tuft-hunter, Epitaph on a - Moore 631 

Tubal, c. in Merchant of Venice - Sha. 181 

Tulip and eglantine (anon.) - Flo. 462 

Tullochgorum," Remarks on - - - - Burns 333 

Tullus Aufidius, c. in Coriolanus - Sha. 654 

Tumult, To be sung in a - Wes. 2Q 

Tune your fiddles," Remarks on - - Burns 325 

Tupper, Martin F. Song of Seventy - - Fav. 231 

Wedding Gifts Fav. 120 

Turandot," Riddle from Sch. 343 

Turf shall be my fragrant shrine - - Moore 342 

Turkish, From the ----- - Byron 253 

— lady, The Cam. 188 

Turn again, my children, turn - - - Wes. 18 

— again, thou fair Eliza - Burns 239 

— gentle hermit of the dale - Gol. 103 

— not to the prophet's page - - - Ros. 293 

— thy dark eyes again upon thy lover - I. S. S. 31 

— turn my wheel! Turn round and round - Lon. 368 

— wheresoe'er ye be, to Mecca's stone - P. of F. 100 

— you where your lady is - Sha. 193 
Turnbull, Gavin, Poems by - - - - Burns 542 

Song by Burns 541 

Turner, Andrew, Epigram on Burns 187 

Turnimspike, The," Remarks on Burns 301 

Turning to Mecca - - - - - P. of F. 100 

Turpin, Tim— a ballad ----.. Hood 546 

Turtle-dove and poet Wor. 154 

Turtles, The— a fable Hood 286 

Tuscan that wanderest through the realms of Lon. 91 

Tuscany, An evening in - Mer. 443 

Tush, tush ! fear boys with bugs - - - Sha. 235 

Tutor of Rutland, c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 - - Sha. 526 

Twa dogs, The— a tale Burns 72 

— herds, The ; or, The holy Tulzie - - Burns 41 
'Twas a lonely thought to mark the hours - Hem. 349 

— a long journey lay before us Cow. 524 

— a marechal of France, and he fain would Scott 384 



K£Q Truth 

«JOO 'Tvras 

'Twas a new feeling — something more - Moore 104 

- a proud moment — even to hear the words Moore 589 

— a summery day in the last of May Wil. 258 ; Fav. 192 

— a sunny day, and the morning psalm - Fav. 300 

— a vision of childhood that came - - - Hoi. 131 

— All-Soul's eve, and Surrey's heart beat high Scott 38 

— at the royal feast for Persia won - - Dry. 527 
■ — autumn ; through Provence had ceased - Hog. 219 

— but a dream ! I saw the stag leap free - Hem. 149 

— but for a moment— and yet in that time Moore 203 

— caviare to the general -■--.- Sha. 824 

— daybreak, and the fingers of the dawn - Wil. 23 

— dead of the night when I sat in my dwelling She. 554 

— early day, and sunlight streamed - - Hem. 429 

— eve and May when last, through tears - Mer. 215 

— even — the dewy fields were green - - Burns 202 

— evening, and before my eyes _■■-•- Bry. 341 

— evening time in the twilight sweet - - Moore 636 

— in a land, that far away - - - Moore 542 

— in a shady avenue Hood 82 

— in an airy dream of night - Moore 38 

— in that mellow season of the year - - Hood 15 

— in that memorable year - Hood 571 

— in that place o' Scotland's isle - - - Burns 73 

— in that season of the year. (Hewit.) - Burns 295 

— in the fair Aspasia's bower - - - Moore 147 

— in the glad season of spring - Cow. 450 

— in the middle of the night - - - Hood 599 

— in the prime of summer time - - Hood 98 

— in the reign of Lewis, called the Great - Hood 503 

— in the seventeen hundred year - - Burns 281 

— in the summer time so sweet - Moore 145 ; Fav. 282 

— in the year two thousand and one - - Hood 525 

— kin' o' kingdom-come to look - - - Low. 229 

— late, and the gay company was gone - - Wil. 193 

— late — the sun had almost shone - - Moore 583 

— midnight— through the lattice - - - Flo. 123 

— morn upon the Grecian hills - - - Hem. 311 

— my last waking thought, how could it be - Col. 223 
- my purpose on a day ----- Cow. 618 

— na her bonny blue ee — a song - - Burns 285 

— near the fair city of Benevent - Scott 450 

— • night, and many a circling bow - - Moore 42 

— night in Babylon ; yet many a beam - Hem. 280 

— night; the noise and bustle of the day - Pog. 73 

— night. The tranquil moonlight smile - Whi. 41 

— noon, and Afric's dazzling sun on high - Hem. 259 

— noon of night when round the pole - - Moore 39 

— not by means of my nectar - - - - Sch. 228 

— not the air, 'twas not the words - - Moore 477 



35s* 564 

•Twas now the hour when night had driven Byron 134 

— off the Wash — the sun went down - - Hood 355 

— on a day ------- Moore 171 

— on a joyless and a gloomy morn - - Dry. 312 

— on the famous trotting-ground - - - Hoi. 309 

— on the Eed Sea coast, at morn, we met - Moore 194 

— one of those dreams - Moore 269 

— Pentecost, the feast of gladness - - Lon. 24 

— summer, and the sun had mounted high - Wor. 598 

— sunset, and the Ranz des Vaches was sung Cam. 109 

— the deep mid watch of the silent night - Hem. 256 

— the hour when rites unholy - - - Cam. 188 

— twelve o'clock, not twelve at night - - Hood 461 

— when among our linden-trees - - - Scott 366 

— when the earth in summer glory lay - - Bry. 327 

— when the world was in its prime - - Moore 541 

— where the hirch and sounding thong are Burns 137 
Tweed-side, Eemarks on ... - Burns 303 
Tweedledee, Gospel according to - - Low. 188 
Twelfth Night— a comedy - Sha. 281 
Twenty-second of December - Bry. 129 

— seventh of March, The - Bry. 231 

— third psalm, The ------ Her. 274 

— years ago. (Home Journal.) - - - Fav. 83 
'Twere all as good to ease one beast of grief L. of A. 88 

— all one that I should love - Sha. 255 

— no hard task, perchance, to win - - - Low. 380 

— to consider too curiously - Sha. 841 
Twickenham grotto, On his - - - Pope 376 
Twilight Lon. 127 

— To— a sonnet ------- Wor. 238 

Twilight's soft dews steal o'er the village green Rog. 255 

Twirl him ! twirl him ! blind and dumb - - Sch. 299 

Twist ye, twine ye " Scott 399 

'Twixt the future and the past - Mer. 418 

— the heavens and the earth ----- Sch. 318 

— those twin worlds — the world of sleep - Ros. 296 
Two and two, Newgate fashion - - - Sha. 399 

— angels, The - Lon. 215; Whi. 411 

— angry men — in heat they sever - - Ing. 515 

— April mornings Wor. 417 

— are the Daths by which mankind - - Sch. 248 

— are the roads that before thee lie open - Sch. 249 

— armies, The ------- Hoi. 162 

— bees within a crystal flower bell rocked - Ten. 474 

— brothers once, an ill-matched pair - - Low. 164 

— children in two neighbor villages - - Ten. 21 

— cupbearers, Song of the - - - Moore 669 

— dark-eyed maids, at shut of day - - - Bry. 217 

— daughters of this aged stream are we - Dry. 557 



xaz 'Twas 

JDd Type 

Two faces o'er a cradle bent - - - Eliot 127 

— fellers, Isrel named and Joe - - - Low. 164 

— founts. The - - Col. 223 

— gateways, The P. of F. 171 

— Gentlemen of Verona — a comedy - - Sha. 21 

— graves, The Bry. 109 

— gunners, The — a fable Low. 164 

— hands upon the breast - Fav. 410 

— homes, The - - Hem. 229 

— households, both alike in dignity - - Sha. 712 

— hundred years. (Pierpont.) - Fav. 133 

— interpreters, The ----- p r0 . 185 

— kinds of genie there are - Sch. 246 

— little hands that meet - Ten. 491 

— locks of hair, The ------ Lon. 37 

— lovely berries molded - Sha. 171 

— lovers - Eliot 127 

— loves - - Pro. 340 

— loves I have of comfort and despair— a sonnet Sha. 1045 

— Margarets, The ------ Ing. 477 

— neighbors furiously dispute - Cow. 605 

— nymphs, both nearly of an age - - Cow. 478 

— paths of virtue ------ s c h. 249 

— poets, (poets by report - Cow. 489 

— rabbis, The ------ - Whi. 333 

— rivers, The Erne. 213 ; Lon. 383 

— sayings, The — a sonnet - Bro. 85 

— separate divided silences - Ros. 246 

— sisters, To - Rog. 234 

— sketches — sonnets Bro. 90 

— spirits, The - - Pro. 147; She. 429 

— spirits reached this world of ours - - Cam. 260 

— stars keep not their motion - Sha. 407 

— streams, The - - . - - - - Hoi. 141 

— thieves, The ------- Wor. 485 

— things thou shalt not long for - - - Erne. 248 

— travelers, The ------- Bry. 341 

— truths are told as happy prologues - - Sha. 790 

— voices are there : one is of the sea - - Wor. 271 

— voices, The ------- Ten. 95 

— words there are, both short - Goe. 221 

— worlds -------- Pro. 232 

— young lovers in winter weather - - - Ten. 639 
Twopenny post-bag, The - Moore 302 
Tybalt, c. in Romeo and Juliet - Sha. 712 
Tyndrum in a storm — a sonnet - - - Wor. 385 
Tynwald hall — a sonnet ----- Wor. 403 
Type of Christ, the servant gains - - - Wes. 277 

— of the antique Rome ! Poe 70 

— of the cherubim above - Cam. 306 



Type koo 

Untimely UDO 

Type of two mighty Continents ! — combining Whi. 172 

Types, The. (Divan, iii.) - - - - Goe. 366 

Tyrannic love, " Prologue to ... Dry. 481 

Tyrant and the captive, The - - - Pro. 253 

— Swellfoot, king of Thebes, c. inCEdipus Tyr. She. 323 
Tyrolese, Feelings of the — a sonnet - - Wor. 278 

— song of liberty ---.-■_ Moore 651 

— Submission of the — a sonnet - - - .Wor. 279 
Tyrrel, Sir James, c. in Richard iii. - - - Sha. 556 

Tytler, A. T., Letter to Burns 463 

Tytler, William, To Burns 110 

Ugly fellow, Epigram on an - - - Cow. 521 

Ukenheim, a citizen, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 

Ulalume - - - - - - -• Poe 66 

Ulla, or the adjuration ----- Hem. 404 

Ulster, Return to Scott 399 

Ultima Thule— parts 1 and 2 ... Lon. 394, 402 

Ulysses — a pastoral poem Ten. 88 

— c. in The Cyclops She. 523 

— c. in Troilus and Cressida - Sha. ^22 

— Arrival of, in Ithaca ----- Odys. 185 

Umbra - - - - Pope 377 

Unbelief, For one convinced of Wes. 308 

Unblemished let me live or die unknown - Pope 465 

Unboastful bard ! whose verse concise - - Col. 52 

Uncertain glory of an April day - - - Sha. 24 

Uncertainty — a sonnet ----- Wor. 355 

— In - Wes. 89 

Unchanged within to see all changed without Col. 210 

Unclasp me, stranger ! and unfold - - - Rog. 296 

Uncloser, The P. of F. 59 

Unco guid, Address to the - - - -Burns 78 

Under a spreading chestnut tree - - - Lon. 36 

— mount Etna he lies Lon. 226 

— the arch of life, where love - - - Ros. 264 

— the green hedges after the snow - - - Flo. 41 

— the greenwood tree Sha. 212 

— the mistletoe ------- Flo. 198 

— the old elm ------- Low. 410 

— the shadow of a stately pile - Wor. 318 

— the violets Hoi. 177 

— the walls of Monterey ----- Lon. 218 

— the willows ------- Low. 329 

— these the plain gleamed - - - L. of A. 36 

— this marble or under this sill - - - Pope 349 

— Washington elm, Cambridge - - - Hoi. 154 

— which king, Besonian? - - . g na# 436 

Underbill, John Whi. 385 

Underneath an old oak tree. - Col. 86 



567 ^fmely 

Understanding indeed can repeat what already Sch. 256 

Undiscovered country, from whose bourn - Sha. 826 

Une pensee. (Hood.) - - - - - Flo. 163 

Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown - Sha. 422 

Unequal marriage — an antique - Goe. 271 

Unerring, The - - - - - - P. of F. 188 

Unexpressed ------- p r0 . 189 

Unfathomable sea, whose waves are years ! She. 436 

Unfold thy face, unmask thy ray - - - Flo. 304 

Unfortunate lady t Elegy to an - - Pope 90 

— woman, To an ------ Col. 59 

— woman at the theater, To an - - - Col. 158 
Ungrateful country, if thou e'er forget - - Wor. 373 

Ungratefulness Her. 168 

Unhand me, gentlemen - - - - - Sha. 817 

Unhappy lot of Mr. Knott - Low. 313 

— White! ------- White 229 

Union and liberty ------ Hoi. 158 

— of Rodna and Krishna - - - - I. S. S. 65 

United States, To the Cam. 316 

Unity - . . Erne. 236 

Universal prayer, The ----- Pope 221 

■ — redemption - - Wes. 186 

Universities, For the ----- Wes. 165 

University carrier, On the Mil. 419 

Unkindness ------- Her. 182 

Unknown grave, The Pro. 91 

— maiden - - - Sch. 188 

— The. (L'Inconnue.) Hoi. 79 

— way, The ------- Bry. 212 

Unless experience be a jewel - Sha. 50 

— to Peter's chair the viewless wind - - Wor. 362 

— with my Amanda blessed - Tho. 466 

— you can think when the song is done - Bro. 295 
Unlettered small knowing soul - - - Sha. 137 
Unlike are we, unlike, O princely heart ! - Bro. 153 
Unlimited, The. (Divan, ii.) - - - - Goe. 365 
Unpack my heart with words - - - Sha. 825 
Unquiet childhood here by special grace - Wor. 244 

— thought ! whom at the first I bred - - Spe. 687 
Unrighteous Lord of love, what law is this - Spe. 689 
Unrisen splendor of the brightest sun - - She. 506 
Unsatisfied -------- Hoi. 308 

Unsavory all our offerings are - - - Wes. 248 

Unseen- - - - - - - - . - Pro. 298 

— it helpeth ye with faithful hands - L. of A. 150 

— spirits - - - - Fav. 252; Poe24; Wil. 280 
Unthrifty loveliness, why dost thou spend - Sha. 1028 

Until we meet again ! Lon. 405 

Untimely lost — a sonnet ----- Ros. 300 



Unto 
Valeria 



568 



Unto Nirvana where the silence lives 
Untouched by love, the maiden's breast 

— through all severity of cold ! 
Untremulous in the river clear 
Unused to the melting mood 

Un watched the garden bough shall sway 
Unwept, unhonored and unsung 
Unwin, I should but ill repay 

— Mrs. , Sonnet to 

— Rev. W. C, To 

Up amang yon cliffy rocks. (Dudgeon.) 

— and down the village streets 

— and warn a' Willie," Remarks on - 

— from the meadows rich with corn 

— in the morning early — a song - 

— in the mountain I was a-sitting - 

— rose the sun o'er moor and mead 

— said the spirit, and ere I could pray - 

— soared the lark into the air 

— the hillside, down the glen - 

— the streets of Aberdeen 

— Timothy, up with your staff and away ! 

— to the throne of G-od is borne - 

— up, my brave comrades 

— up ! my friend, and quit your books 

— up ! ye dames, ye lasses gay 

— wi' the carles o' Dysart 

— with me ! up with me into the clouds - 
Upham, C. W., Jr., In memory of 
Uplift a thousand voices full and sweet - 
Upon a day, as love lay slumbering 

— a disk my course I trace 

— a rock that, high and sheer 

— a Sabbath-day it fell - 

— a simmer Sunday morn 

— a spacious meadow play 

— a summer morn, a southern 

— a time, before the faery broods - 

— his battlements he stood 

— that famous river's other shore - 

— that night when fairies light 

— the banks o' flowing Clyde - 

— the everlasting hills - 

— the landscape of his coming life - 

— the mead a violet stood 

— the mountain's distant head - 

— the sixteen hundred year - 

— the sunny bank the fox-glove .- - 

— the utmost verge of a high bank 

— - this hint I spake 



L. of A. 164 

- Scott 436 

- Wor. 246 
Low. 7 

- Sha. 910 
Flo. 502 

- Scott 35 

- Cow. 433 

- Cow. 495 

- Cow. 433 

- Burns 305 

- Whi. 223 

- Burns 325 

- Whi. 269 

- Burns 217 

- Goe. 75 

- Scott 447 
Moore 633 

- Lon. 362 

- Whi. 66 

- Whi. 121 

- Wor. 113 

- Wor. 433 

- Seh. 338 

- Wor. 412 

- Col. 299 

- Burns 278 

- Wor. 147 

- Hoi. 146 

- Ten. 389 
Spe. 674 

- Sch. 197 

- Bry. 176 
Keats 242 

- Burns 86 

- Sch. 193 

- Wil. 88 
Keats 140 

Sch. 138 

- Spe. 579 

- Burns 45 
Burns 211 

- Mer. 357 

- Ros. 300 
Goe. 104 

- Bry. 123 

- Burns 49 

- Flo. 169 

- Dante 35 

- Sha. 883 



KttQ Unto 

0Dy Valeria 

Upon thy pictured lineaments I looked - Fav. 185 

— what meat doth this our Caesar feed - - Sha. 766 
Urania - - - - - - - - Hoi. 49 

— (Hermann and Dorothea, ix.) - - - Goe. 351 

— (Tears of the Muses.) - - - - - Spe. 587 
Urbino, c. in Michelangelo - Lon. 462 
Urged by ambition, who with subtlest skill Wor. 360 

— by the world and Satan, I - Wes. 280 

Uriel Erne. 21 

Urn and sword, The ------ Hem. 312 

Ursula, c. in Much Ado about Nothing - Sha. Ill 

Urswick, Christopher, c. in Eichard iii. - - Sha. 556 

Ury, Barclay of ----- - Whi. 121 

Uschk Nameh. (Divan, iii.) - Goe. 366 

Use almost can change the stamp of nature Sha. 833 

— every man after his desert - - - - Sha. 824 

— of riches, The ----- Pope 239, 253 
Usurper's fate, The — a sequel - - - - Col. 250 

— fortune, The — a prelude - Col. 230 
Ut mens, forma, decor, facies, mos - - - Mil. 508 
Utility of flowers in the arts - Flo. 13 
Uttered by whom, or how inspired - - - Wor. 295 

Vail after vail will lift — but there must be L. of A. 145 

Vailed prophet of Khorassan, The - - Moore 359 

— statue of Sais ------ s c h. 185 

Vain, delusive world, adieu - Wes. 341 

— is the blaze of wealth, the pomp of power Rog. 217 

— man, thou may'st esteem thy love - - Scott 456 

— virtues — a sonnet ----- Ros. 268 
Vainly wouldst thou, to gain a heart - - Goe. 36 
Valdenses. See Vaudois and Waldenses. 

Valdesso, c. in Michelangelo - Lon. 427 

Valdesso's divine considerations," Preface to Her. 405 

Valdez, Marquis, c. in Remorse - - - Col. 310 

Vale of St. John, The ----- Scott 230 

Valediction - - - - Bro. 69; Cow. 420; Goe. 243 

Valedictory sonnet — a sonnet - - - Wor. 249 

— stanzas -------- Cam. 169 

Valencia, Siege of — a dramatic poem - - Hem. 433 

Valentine, c. in Faust - Faust 22 

— c. in Two Gentlemen of Verona - - Sha. 21 

— c. in Twelfth Night Sha. 281 

— c. in Titus Andronicus ... - Sha. 688 

— (Southey.) Flo. 464 

— A - - Hood 518 

— to F. S. Osgood Poe 76 

— to Mary C. Stanhope Mac. 214 

Valentine's day. See St. Valentine. 

Valeria, c. in Coriolanus - - - - Sha. 654 



Valkyriur Kb(\ 

Victorian ° • u 

Valkyriur song Hem. 129 

Valley of Cauteretz, In the - - - - Ten. 386 

— of the Nile, The - - Moore 668 

— of the shadow of death, The - - - Cow. 77 

— of unrest, The - - Poe 91 

Vallombrosa monastery, At - - - - Wor. 317 

— I longed in thy shadiest wood - - - Wor. 302 
Vampire, The ------- Mer. 203 

Van Artevelde, Clara, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 
Vanden Bosch, Peter, c. in Philip Van Arte- 
velde -------- Tay. 30 

Van Drongelen, Henry, c. in Philip Van A. Tay. 30 

Vane, Sir Harry, c. in Charles the First - She. 492 

Vane, Henry, Sonnet to - Mil. 479 

Vanguard of liberty, ye men of Kent - - Wor. 274 

Vanishers, The - - - - - - - Whi. 321 

Vanitas ! Vanitatum vanitas !— a song - - Goe. 91 

Vanity - - Her. 171, 173 

— of the world Cow. 56 

— of vanities, all is vanity - Wes. 286 
Van Merestyn, Adriana, c. in Philip Van Arte- 
velde -------- Tay. 30 

— Nuitre, Peter, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tay. 30 

— Eyk, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - - - Tay. 30 

— Stockenstrom, c. in Philip Van Artevelde Tav. 232 
r- Whelk, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - - Tay. 232 

Varrius, c. in Measure for Measure - - Sha. 67 

— c. in Antony and Cleopatra - Sha. 911 
Varro, c. in Julius Ceesar - Sha. 764 
Vase of life — a sonnet Ros. 273 

— The ------- Moore 153 

Vassal's lament for the fallen tree, The - - Hem. 139 

Vauclaire, c. in Philip Van Artevelde - - Tay_. 232 

Vaudois teacher, The - Whi. 91 

— The— a sonnet Wor. 364 

— valleys, The Hem. 383 

— wife, The Hem. 219 

— See also Waldenses. 

Vaudracour and Julia Wor. 11 5 

Vaughan, Sir Thomas, c. in Richard hi. - - Sha. 556 

Vaulting ambition which o'erleaps - - Sha. 792 

Vaux, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 496 

— Sir Nicholas, c. in Henry viii. - - - Sha. 592 

Vega, De la. To a mirror Flo. 48 

Veil. See Vail. 

Venerable rival, Upon a - ... - Cow. 39 

Venetian epigrams Goe. 275 

— pastoral, A — a sonnet Ros. 153 

— republic, Extinction of — a sonnet - - Wor. 270 
Veni Creator spiritus Dry. 542 



K>71 Valkyrius 

° * *■ Victorian 

Venice, Duke, c. in Merchant of Venice - Sha. 181 

c. in Othello - - - - - - Sha. 879 

Venice, Italy - - - Lon. 381; Mer. 209; Rog. 38 

— Brides of - Rog. 55 

— Scene in— a sonnet ----- Wor. 362 
Venomous tongue tipped with vile adder's - Spe. 701 
Ventidius, c. in Antony and Cleopatra - Sha. 911 

— c. in Timon of Athens - - - - - Sha. 741 
Venus and Adonis ------ Sha. 1000 

— and the moon - - Wor. 395 

— sets ere Mercury can rise - - - - Pope 493 

— To -------- She. 520 

— To the planet — a sonnet - Wor. 250, 387 

— Verticordia— a sonnet Ros. 159 

— victrix — a sonnet Ros. 243 

— when her son was lost ----- Erne. 92 
Verbena, wild, Poesy of the - - - - Flo. 210 
Verges, c. in Much Ado about Nothing - - Sha. Ill 
Verily, all things— saith the book - P. of F. 139 

— God is guard! - - - - - P. of F. 112 

Verity of Sayid P. of F. 27 

Vernal ode Wor. 205 

— shower, The. (Mrs. Hemans.) - - - Flo. 426 
Vernon, Mary, Epitaph to - Wor. 489 

— Sir Richard, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 - - Sha. 382 
Vernon, of York faction, c. in Henry vi. , pt. 1 Sha. 469 
Vero verius ergo quid sit, audi - - - Her. 594 

Verona, Dante at - Ros. 56 

Versailles, Charles Edward at Ayt. 134 

Versatility of popular favor — an essay - - Gol. 414 

Verse, a breeze mid blossoms straying - Col. 213 

Verses for after dinner, 1844 - Hoi. 38 

Vertumnus and Pomona -.--•- Pope 439 

Vervain, Poesy of the Flo. 210 

Very good orators when they are out - - Sha. 222 

— great, The - - - - - - P. of F. 85 

— pink of courtesy Sha. 722 

Vespers of Palermo — a tragedy - - - Hem. 493 

Vesta Whi. 392 

Vex not thou the poet's mind - Ten. 17 

Vicar, The ------- Cra. 326 

Vice-Chancellor, On the death of. (Milton.) Cow. 572 

Vice is a monster of so frightful mien - - Pope 200 

Vicissitudes of Christian life. (Mme. Guy on.) Cow. 636 

Victim, The- - - Ten. 442 

Victor Emanuel entering Florence - - Bro. 609 

— Galbraith Lon. 218 

— in drama, victor in romance - - - Ten. 721 

Victoria She. 554 

Victorian, c. in Spanish Student - - - Lon. 44 



Victoria's k *7 9 

Visionary *' ' -" 

Victoria's scepter o'er the deep - - - Cam. 314 

— tears - - - - - - - - Bro. 112 

Victory ! so once more the cry - Eos. 108 

Vienna, Deliverance of ----- Mac. 191 

— Siege of — a sonnet - Wor. 286 

View across the Roman Campagna - - Bro. 617 

— from Castri, The ------ Hem. 318 

Viewless essence, thin and bare - Scott 455 

Vignettes -------- Hoi. 127 

Vile blows and buffets of the world - - Sha. 797 

— squeaking of the wry-necked fife - - Sha. 188 
Villa Franca ------- Low. 368 

First news from Bro. 608 

Tale of Bro. 350 

Villa Garcia, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

Village blacksmith, The Lon. 36 

— preacher. (Goldsmith.) - Fav. 159 

— The - - - Cra. 236 

— wife, The ; or, The entail - Ten. 701 

— without painting - Cha. 597 
Villain and he be many miles - - - - Sha. 730 
Villainous company hath been - Sha. 379 
Villegas, From Spanish of - - - - - Bry. 139 
Villon, Francois, Translations from - - Ros. 136 
Vincentio, c. in Measure for Measure - - Sha. 67 

— c. in Taming of the Shrew - Sha. 229 
Vine, vine and eglantine ----- Ten. 490 
Viola, c. in Twelfth Night - Sha. 281 
Violent delights have violent ends - - - Sha. 724 

— grief, Under ------ Burns 93 

Violenta, c. in All's Well that Ends Well - Sha. 254 

Violet, Alpine. (Byron.) - Flo. 41 

— bank, A. (Shakespeare.) - - - - Flo. 43 

— is for faithfulness Flo. 36 

— Poesy of the - Flo. 38 

— sweet violet ! Low. 17 

— The - - - - - Goe. 104; Flo. 43; Scott 373 

— The — a sonnet. (Shakespeare.) - - Flo. 384 

— To a fading. (Shelley.)- - - - - Flo. 40 

— Yellow. (Bryant.) ----- Flo. 44 
Violets. (Moultrie, Landon, Hunt.) - Flo. 41, 42, 477 

— Angry. (Drayton.) ----- Flo. 42 

— Bouquet of. (Shelley.) Flo. 43 

— dim but sweeter than the lids - Sha. 320 
Virelai --------- Cha. 603 

VIRGIL, Poems of : 

JEneid, The 123 ! Life of Virgil .... 3 

Alexis— a pastoral ... 17 Lycidas and Mceris— a pastoral . 46 

Daphnis — a pastoral . . .29 Meliboeus. (Pastoral, vii.) . 38 

Gallus— a pastoral . . . 49 , — Tityrus and— a pastoral . . 31 

Georgics, The 52 | Moeris, Lycidas and— a pastoral 46 



K'JQ Victoria's 

u ' " "V isionary 

Palaemon— a pastoral . . . 20 I Pollio— a pastoral ... 26 

Pastorals 13 Silenus— a pastoral . . .34 

Pharmaceutria— a pastoral . . 42 ] Tityrus and Meliboeus . . 13 

Virgil and Tibullus, Epitaph on - - Byron 133 

— From — tenth eclogue - - She. 534 

— Juvenile lines from Scott 372 

— Life of - - - - . - - - - Vir. 3 

— On a leaf from tomb of - Hem. 324 

— To • - Ten. 729 

— Translations from ------ Cow. 535 

Virgilia, c. in Coriolanus - Sha. 654 

Virgil's first eclogue - Lon. 386 

— gnat Spe. 589 

Virgin, Hymn to the Hem. 212 

— Mary to Jesus Bro. 62 

— of Delphi, To Moore 190 

— The— a sonnet Wor. 367 

Virginia - Mac. 92 

— slave-mother's farewell - Whi. 56 
Virgin's bower, On a plant of - - - - Cow. 499 

— cradle-hymn ------ Col. 199 

— of Paradise, whose black eyes shine - P. of F. 104 
Viro qui multa peregrinatione - - - Mil. 511 
Virtue - - - - - - - Her. 176 ; Fav. 329 

— alone is happiness below - Pope 218 

— alone is sweet society - -Erne. 301 

— is bold, and goodness ----- Sha. 79 

— itself turns vice, being misapplied - - Sha. 721 

— of woman - Sch. 260 

— she finds too painful an endeavor - - Pope 235 
--Two paths of ------ Sch. 248 

Virtuous and vicious every man must be - Pope 200 

— young lady, Sonnet to a - - - - Mil. 475 

Viscount of Dundee, The ----- Ayt. 202 

Vishnu, Hymn to - - - - - - I. S. S. 11 

Vision, A - Burns 259- Mer. 188; Moore 633; Pro. 175 

— A. (A. M. E.) - Fav. 226 

— of Belshazzar ------ Byron 194 

— of Don Eoderick Scott 162 

— of Echard, The - Whi. 399 

— of judgment, The Byron 209 

— of philosophy, A Moore 194 

— of poets, A - Bro. 245 

— of sin, The Ten. 115 

— of Sir Launfal, The Low. 107 

— of the sea, A ------ She. 461 

— of virgins, A Mer. 455 

— The Burns 60 

— upon the conceit of the Faery Queen - Spe. 23 
Visionary hope, The Col. 165 



Visionary K*7 A 

Waldhave ** • * 

Visionary power attends the motions - - Wor. 534 

Visions of Bellay Spe. 683 

— of Petrarch Spe. 685 

— of the world's vanity Spe. 674 

Visit of the gods, The - Col. 203 

— The Erne. 20; Goe. 196 

Visitation of the sick — a sonnet - - - Wor. 377 

Viswamitra the magician Lon. 378 

Vita-nuova, " On the— a sonnet - <- - Ros. 162 

Vital spark of heavenly flame - Pope 359 

Viterbo, c. in Michelangelo - Lon. 435 

Vittoria, c. in Vespers of Palermo - - - Hem. 493 

— Colonna, c. in Michelangelo - Lon. 415 

— Colonna Lon. 374 

Sonnets to Lon. 393 

Vive la France! Hoi. 153 

Vivian, Emilia, To She. 437 

Vivien— an idyl Ten. 287 

Vocabulary of flowers Flo. 225 

— to Hiawatha - Lon. 416 

Vogelweid, Walter von der - Lon. 88 

Voice and the peak, The ----- Ten. 536 

— of autumn, The - - - - - - Bry. 219 

— of home to the prodigal - - - - Hem. 362 

— of New England. (Texas.) - - - Whi. 66 

— ofScio - -Hem. 310 

— of spring - Hem. 328 

— of the grass (anon.) Flo. 415 

— of the gifted elder time - Hem. 125 

— of the grave! ------ -Hem. 390 

— of the loyal north Hoi. 215 

— of the summer wind Ten. 469 

— of the wind - Pro. 64 

— that had been lost, To a - Rog. 237 

Voiceless, The - Hoi. 141 

Voices from the mountains speak - - - Bry. 253 

— of freedom Whi. 41 

— of the night ------- Lon. 1 

— of the past Pro. 101 

— of the waters Lon. 348 

— The ------- Whi. 192 

Voici le roi que ma Sancte Angelette - - Mer. 237 

Void in law Bro. 595 

Voltimand, c. in Hamlet Sha. 811 

Volumes of soimd from the cathedral rolled Wor. 307 

Volumnia, c. in Coriolanus - Sha. 654 

Volumnius, c. in Julius Caesar - - - Sha. 764 

Voluntaries Erne. 178 

Volunteer, The - Hood 571 

Von Questenberg, c. in The Piccolomini - - Col. 407 



r^K Visionary 

° • ° Waldhave 

Von Winkelreid, On the statue of - - Cam. 312 
Voorst, Dame, of Ypres, c. in Philip Van 

Artevelde - Tay. 232 

Votive tablets ------- Sen. 250 

Vouchsafe divine perfection of a woman - Sha. 558 

Vowels, The— a tale Burns 137 

Vox populi - - Lon. 229 

Voyage of Columbus - Eog. 295 

— of Maeldune, The - - - - Ten. 715 

— of the good ship Union Hoi. 216 

— The Ten. 385 

— to Vineland, The Low. 354 

Voyager's dream of land, The - - - Hem. 413 

Vulcan ! hear your glorious task - - Moore 23 

W , Epitaph on - - - - - - Burns 179 

W. ; J., To - - Erne. 31 

W. L., Lines to Col. 198 

W. L. G., To - - - - - - - Whi. 47 

Waait till our Sally cooms in Ten. 692 

Wae is my heart — a song - Burns 261 

Wager, The - Cra. 181 

Wages - - - Ten. 443 

Wagner, c. in Faust ... - Faust 22, 170 

Wagoner, The - - Wor. 159 

Wailing, wailing, wailing - - - Ten. 689 

Wait a little; do we not wait? - Low. 368 

— a little, you say ------ Ten. 687 

— prithee, wait ! " — a sonnet - Wor. 244 
Waiting - - - Pro. 68 

— by the gate Bry. 260 

— soul, The Cow. 73 

— The ------- Whi. 278 

Wake, baillie, wake ! the crafts are out - - Ing. 514 

— maid of Lorn i ----- - Scott 258 

— poet, wake ! the morn - - - - - Wil. 310 

— sisters, wake ! the day-star shines - - Whi. 407 

— the serpent not — a fragment - - - She. 505 

— wake, Quevira ! our soft rest must cease - Dry. 478 

Wakefield, In going to Wes. 29 

Waken, lords, and ladies gay - - - Scott 379 

— not Amor from sleep ! Goe. 269 

Wakening, The Hem. 362 

Waking, The - Ing. 518 

Waldeimsamkeit - Erne. 214 

Walden - Erne. 307 

Waldenses, Hymn of the - Bry. 62 

— The— a sonnet -Wor. 365 

— See also Vaudois. 

Waldhave, c. in MacDufFs Cross - - - Scott 484 



Wales K>7(\ 

Was ° • D 

Wales, Harp of Hem. 239 

Walk at sunset, A ----- - Bry. 37 

— before supper, After a Col. 89 

— The - - - - - - Erne. 304; Sch. 198 

— with the beautiful and with the grand - Fav. 168 
Walker, Mr., Letter to Burns 383 
Walking apart, she thinks none listen - Ing. 518 

— bell, The— a ballad - ., - - - - Goe. 129 

— to the mail - Ten. 73 

— with God ------- Cow. 52 

Wall-flower, Naming of the. (Herrick.) - Flo. 86 

Poesy of the ------ Flo. 83 

The (anon.) ------ Flo. 86 

The. (Moir.) ------ Flo. 84 

Wallace, c. in The Borderers - - - Wor. 43 

— W. R Oh, not by graves - Fav. 212 

— Dirge of ------- Cam. 196 

Walled securely in the ground - - - - Sch. 207 

Wallenstein, Death of— a tragedy - - C 1. 557 

— c. in the Piccolomini uol. 407 

Wallenstein's camp, " Songs from - - - Sch. 338 

Waller, Edmund. Go, lovely rose - - Flo. 353 

— — imitated ----- Cow. 29 ; Pope 443 
Waller was smooth : but Dryden taught - Pope 306 
Walpurga, Fraulein, c. inArmgart - - Eliot 36 
Walpurgis-Night ------ Faust 139 

The first— a cantata -_---* Goe. 157 

Walsingham, Sir Francis, Sonnet to - - Spe. 27 

Walter von der Vogelweid - Lon. 88 

Walthamston, Abbot of, c. in Halidon Hill Scott 462 

Walton, Izaak. Life of George Herbert - Her. 19 

Walton's book of lives — a sonnet - - - Wor. 372 

Waly, waly," Remarks on Burns 319 

Wan-visaged thing ! thy virgin leaf - - Hoi. 81 

Wanderer 1 that stoop'st so low - - - Wor. 395 

— The - - - - Goe. 248; Mer. 172; Wor. 598 
Wanderer's night-songs - - - Goe. Q2 ; Lon. 340 

— storm-song - Goe. 172 

Wandering boy, The White 259 

— Jew, Song for the ----- Wor. 153 

— Jew, The - - She. 557 

— Willie- Burns 233; Scott 378 

Wanderings of Cain, The - Col. 226 

Waning moon, The - - - Bry. 210; She. 506 

— spirit. (P. J. Bailey.) ----- Fav. 86 
Wansfell ! this household has a favored lot - Wor. 250 

Want - - - Mer. 462 

Wanted — Authors of all work, to job for the Moore 642 

Wapentake. Sonnet to Tennyson - - Lon. 385 

War against Babylon - Moore 353 



x>7>7 "Wales 

O « < Was 

War, Fortune of— a song - Goe. 93 

— of Caros, The Oss. 261 

— of Inis-Thona, The Oss. 280 

— poems, 1861-65 Low. 378 

— song— a song - Burns 231 

— song, English ------- Ten. 473 

— song of Lachlan Scott 394 

— song of Royal Dragoons - Scott 373 

— song, Radical Mac. 150 

— The - - - - - - - - Ten. 488 

— time, Poems in Whi. 261 

— war, is still the cry -'.--- Byron 289 
Warbling of blackbirds, The - Ing. 223 
Ward of the law! ----- - Wor. 242 

Warden of the Cinque Ports, The- - - Lon. 213 

Ware, John and Robert, In memory of - - Hoi. 271 

Warm and still in the summer night - - Lon. 372 

— as the cloudless summer morn - - Byron 265 
Warmed by fond nature's wild desire - - Wes. 184 

— by her hand and shadowed by - Ros. 232 
-— by the sun's meridian ray - Tho. 387 
Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze - Pope 193 
Warned of my dissolution - - - - Wes. 137 
Warning — an antique - - - Goe. 269 

— A - Moore 188; Pro. 218 

— The - - - - Goe. 219; Lon. 44; Wor. 431 

Warnings ------- Mer. 192 

Warren, Joseph, M.D. - - - - - Hoi. 300 

Warrior, Character of the happy - - - Wor. 422 

— to his dead bride, The Pro. 291 

— whoce image on thy tomb - - - Hem. 415 
Warriors and chiefs ! should the shaft or the Byron 192 

— my noon of life is past ----- Hem. 333 
Wars of York and Lancaster — a sonnet - Wor. 365 
Wart, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - - - - Sha. 409 
Warton, Remarks on White 416 
Warwick, Earl of, c. in Henry iv. , pt. 2 - - Sha. 409 

c. in Henry v. - Sha. 439 

c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 Sha. 469 

Warwick, peace, proud setter-up and - - Sha. 543 

Was ere puir poet sae befitted - - - Burns 180 

— ever book containing such - Sha. 727 

— ever grief like Thine ----- Wes. 288 

— ever woman in this humor wooed? - - Sha. 560 

— it a dream, or did I see it plain - - - Spe. 700 

— it not enough to dream the day to death Mer. 462 

— it the moon or was it morning's ray - Moore 148 

— it the proud full sail of his great verse Sha. 1038 

— it the work of nature or of art - - - Spe. 691 

— it to disenchant or to undo - Wor. 293 

37 



Was 
We 



578 



Was inan e'er doomed that beauty made - Cam. 267 

— never form and never face - - - - Erne. 233 

— that the landmark? Eos. 260 

— the aim frustrated by force or guile - - Wor. 240 
Washed in the blood of the brave and the - Hoi.. 252 
Washers of the shroud, The ------- Low. 378 

Washington city, On a visit to - - - Whi. 68 

— elm, Under the ----- - Hoi. 154 

Washington's birth-day, Ode for - - - Hoi. 138 

Wasp and the Hornet ----- Hoi. 86 

Waste its sweetness on the desert air - - Fav. 32 

Wasted flowers. (W. Bowen.) - - - Flo. 488 

— weary, wherefore stay - - - Scott 399 
Wat, Epitaph on - - ... Burns 187 
Watch and be firm ! for soul-subduing vice Wor. 355 

— thou and fear; to-morrow thOu - - - Eos. 262 

— ye well ! The moon is shrouded - - Hem. 241 
Watchers, The - - - - - - -Whi. 263 

Watchful, The - - - - - -P. of F. 94 

Watching unto God. (Mme. Guy on.) - - Cow. 639 

Water Erne. 284 

— course, The - - Her. 271 

Water-fetching goes the noble - - - Goe. 143 

_f ow l- . Wor. 198 

— fowl, On scaring some - Burns 110 

— for anguish of the solstice - Eos. 153 

— its living strength first shows - - - Goe. 256 

— lady, The - -Hood 152 

— lilies. (E. E. B.) Flo. 161 

— lily, Eomance of the ----- Wor. 321 

— lily, Star and the - Hoi. 76; Flo. 164, 377 

— lily, The. (J. H. Eeynolds.) - - Flo. 164, 166 

— peri's song, The - Hood 503 

Waterfall and the eglantine, The - - - Wor. 142 

— The - Erne. 307 

Waterfowl, To a- ----- - Bry. 26 

Waterloo, After visiting— a sonnet - - Wor. 293 

— Battle of— a sonnet ----- Wor. 286 

— Field of Scott 304 

Watts, Alaric, Alex. Ten years ago - - Fav. 343 

Waukrife Minnie, A," Eemarks on - - Burns 333 

Waulking of the fauld, Eemarks on - Burns 314 

Wave, The ------ - Lon. 22 

Waverley," Highland chief in - - - -Hem. 334 

Waving, whispering trees - Eos. 289 

Way to behave — an epigram - - - Goe. 223 

Wayside Inn, The - - - - - - Pro. 95 

Tales of a Lon. 232 

We act by fits and starts like drowning men Dry. 519 

We are as clouds that veil the midnight moon She. 395 



579 



Was 
We 



We are blushing roses Flo. 475 

— are borne into life — it is sweet - - - Bro. 95 

— are ever behind, or beyond, or beside - - Mer. 50 

— are free - - Ten. 474 

— are laid asleep in body - - - - - Wor. 188 

— are lilies fair - Flo. 476 

— are men, my liege Sha. 797 

— are much bound to them that do succeed Ing. 508 

— are seven - Wor. 83 

— are slumberous poppies - Flo. 479 

— are such stuff as dreams are made on - - Sha. 16 

— are violets blue Flo. 477 

— are what we are made : each following - Erne. 300 

— ask for peace, O Lord ! Pro. 167 

— burn daylight Sha. 47 

— call it hallowed ground - - - - - Fav. 236 

— cam na here to view your warks - - Burns 178 

— can endure that He should waste our lands Wor. 281 

— cannot hold mortality's strong hand - - Sha. 347 

— cannot live except thus mutually - - Bro. 92 

— cast forth from the beryl - Eos. 191 

— children six our being had - Sch. 196 

— count the broken lyres that rest - - - Hoi. 141 

— cross the prairies as of old - - - Whi. 200 

— crossed Champlain to Keeseville - - - Erne. 159 

— do not curse thee, Waterloo ! - Byron 259 

— do not make our thoughts - Fav. 224 

— figure to ourselves the thing we like - Tay. 59 

— first endure, then pity, then embrace - - Pope 200 

— gather up with pious care - - - - Wes. 276 

— had a female passenger who came - - Wor. 271 

— had a sprightly nymph — in every town - Cra. 414 

— had been wandering for many days - - Whi. 15 

— have heard the chimes - Sha. 424 

— have left behind us ----- Flo. 425 

— have not passed into a doleful city - - Wor. 407 

— have scotched the snake - • - - - Sha. 798 

— have seen better days - - Sha. 755 

— have some salt of our youth in us - - Sha. 52 

— have the myrtle's breath around us here Hem. 167 

— know him out of Shakespeare's art - - Ten. 484 

— know what we are, but _-._'- Sha. 836 

— left behind the painted buoy - - - Ten. 385 

— live in deeds, not years. (Bailey.) - - Fav. 253 

— live to learn - Byron 255 

— love the venerable house - Erne. 192 

— love the well-beloved place - - - - Fav. 63 

— may live without poetry, music, and art Mer. 26 

— may roam through this world - - Moore 222 

— meet not as we parted — a fragment - - She. 493 



"Weeping; 580 

We met. (T. Haynes Bailey.) ---- Fav. 344 

— missed you last night at the hoary old - Moore 308 

— must not doubt, or fear, or dread - - Pro. 216 

— must take the current when it serves - Sha. 782 

— now have play'd Augustus wantonly - - Spe. 589 

— overstate the ills of life - - - - Bro. 88 

— praise not now the poet's art - - -,Whi. 323 

— reach the utmost limit of the earth - - Bro. 115 

— reached the place by night - Ing. 134 

— reached the summit of the scale and stood Dante 163 

— read the flying courser's name - - Moore 37 

— Robert Burns, by virtue of a warrant - Burns 359 

— sat down and wept by the waters Byron 195 ; Flo. 141 

— sat on grassy slopes that meet - - - Ing. 88 

— sat within the farmhouse old - - - Lon. 129 

— saw, but surely, in the motley crowd - Wor. 405 

— saw the slow tides go and come - - - Whi. 388 

— saw thee, O stranger ! and wept - - Hem. 134 

— see but half the causes of our deeds - - Low. 49 

— see into the life of things - Wor. 188 

— see not, know not ; all our way - Whi. 261 

— sent it down upon the night of power - P. of F. 188 

— shall go forth together. There will come - Wil. 97 

— shall ne'er be younger - - - Sha. 231 

— shape ourselves the joy or fear - - - Whi. 131 

— shuddered with unlanguaged pain - - Fav. 445 

— sing " Our country's song to-night - - Hoi. 215 

— sow the glebe, we reap the corn - - Bro. 293 

— strew these opiate flowers - She. 377 

— talked with open heart and tongue - - Wor. 417 

— tend the flowers of every hue ... Flo. 368 

— too have autumns ----- Low. 98 

— trust and fear, we question and believe - Hoi. 105 

— wait beneath the furnace-blast - - - Whi. 262 

— walked about at Hampton court - Mer. 240 

— walked along, while bright and red - - Wor. 417 

— walked beside the sea ----- Bro. 71 

— watched her breathing through Hood 169 ; Fav. 89 

— welcome you, lords of the land of the sun ! Hoi. 258 

— were crowded in the cabin - - - - Fav. 149 

— were two daughters of one race - - Ten. 36 

— whose home is the beryl - Ros. 174, 182 

— will not speak of years to-night - - Hoi. 144 

— wreathed about our darling's head - - Flo. 359 

— young people in the shade - - - Goe. 21 
Weak and irresolute is man - Cow. 425 

— is th' assurance that weak flesh reposeth Spe. 697 

— is the will of man, his judgment blind - Wor. 233 

— winged in song Low. 384 

— with nice sense, the chaste - Flo. 109 



koi We 

00 1 Weeping 

Weakest goes to the wall ... - Sha. 712 

— thing, The - - - - - - - Bro. 77 

Weakness that charms reluctance that endears Rog. 242 

Wealth -------- Mer. 462 

— and dominion fade— a fragment - - She. 502 

— is not happiness. (Mrs. Norton.) - - Fa v. 262 

— On late acquired Cow. 516 

— what it cannot buy Cow. 520 

Wealthy curled darlings of our nation - Sha. 881 

Weariest and most loathed worldly life - - Sha. 78 

Weariness - Lon. 228 

— can snore upon the flint - . - Sha. 962 
Weary already, weary miles to-night - - Ros. 163 

— fa' you, Duncan Gray — a song - - Burns 215 

— of my own complaints .... Wes. 314 

— pund o' tow, The — a song - - - Burns 247 

— souls who wander wide - - - - Wes. 315 

— with toil I haste me to my bed— a sonnet - Sha. 1031 
Weave roses for your mate - Erne. 101 

— thee a wreath of woodbine - Flo. 136 

Webster, Daniel, 1834 Erne. 312 

Birthday of .--..- Hoi. 139 

Wedding-day, The ------ Lon. 209 

— gifts. (Tupper.) Fav. 120 

— is great Juno's crown . - - Sha. 228 

— night, The— a song Goe. 41 

— songs Goe. 113 ; Ing. 165 

— songs. See also Epithalamium. 

— The Goe. 238 

— vail. The. (E. H. W.) Whi. 398 

Wedlock Ing. 391 

Wee Johnny, Epitaph on - - - - Burns 185 

— man, The Hood 374 

— modest, crimson-tipped flower - Burns 80 ; Flo. 17 

— sleekit, cowrin', tim'rous beastie ! - - Burns 45 

— Willie Gray — a song - Burns 228 
Weep, children of Israel - Moore 348 

— daughter of a royal line - - - - Byron 253 

— for the early lost ! Hem. 265 

— maiden, weep here o'er the tomb - - Goe. 43 

— not, beloved friends ! nor let the air - Wor. 186 

— not for Scio's children slain - - - - Bry. 43 

— not for those Moore 341 

— on, weep on - Moore 235 

— weep for him, the man of God - - - Moore 348 
■ — ye common mourners, weep - Wes. 125 

— ye not, ye children dear - - - - Goe. 22Q 
Weeping for thee, my love, through the long Moore 662 

— imitation of Cowley Pope 445 

— murmuring, complaining - Gol. I3U 



"Weeping K09 

Wesley °°^ 

Weeping willow, Poesy of the - Flo. 141 

Weepest thou for him whose doom was sealed Hem. 332 

Weimar, prince of , To - - - - - Sen. 287 

Weirdlaw Hill, Sun upon the - Scott 411 

Wei sayd, by corpus boones ! " quod oure host Cha. 399 

Welcome and farewell — a song - - - Goe. 47 

— cross - - Cow. 74 

— dear feast of Lent ! who loves not thee - Her. 174 

— dear heart ----- Hood 157 ; Flo. 7 

— ever smiles and farewell -- . - - Sha. 639 

— grave stranger, to our green retreats - Scott 382 

— home again, brave seaman ! - - - - Whi. 65 

— joy and welcome sorrow - Keats 278 

— my old friend ------- Lon. 88 

— O stork ! that dost wing - Lon. 338 

— Songs of - Hoi. 255 

— sweet and sacred cheer - Her. 284 

— the coming speed the going guest - - Pope 286 

— to Alexandra ------ Ten. 388 

— to duke of Edinburgh Ten. 535 

— to general Dumourier— a song - - - Burns 252 

— to grand-duke Alexis Hoi. 255 

— to the day returning Hoi. 138 

— to the nations, 1876 - - - - - Hoi. 306 

— to the table - - Cow. 70 

— wild harbinger of spring ! Flo. 30 
Well and wisely said the Greek - - - Erne. 243 

— doctor, great concoctor ----- Hood 464 

— Frances ------- i n g. 38 

— have yon railway laborers — a sonnet - - Wor. 251 

— having stooped to conquer with success - Gol. 364 

— I confess, I did not guess - - - Hood 584 

— if it be my time to quit the stage - - Pope 499 

— if the bard was weather-wise who made - Col. 191 

— it isn't the king, after all, my dear creature ! Moore 512 

— may sleep present us fictions - - - Cam. 167 

— may you sit within, and, fond of grief - Rog. 234 

— may'st thou halt and gaze with brightening Wor. 22Q 

— Miss, I wonder where you live - - - Hoi. 8 

— now all's ended, and my comrades gone - Gol. 366 

— of loch Maree, The ----- Whi. 143 

— once I was a little girl ----- Flo. 360 

— peace to thy heart, though another's it be Moore 139 

— pleased all listened to the telle - - - Lon. 295 

— pleased the audience heard the tale - - Lon. 286 

— said : that was laid on with a trowel - - Sha. 207 

— sang the bard who called the grave - - Wor. 385 

— sped thy mission, bold iconoclast ! - - Whi. 148 

— thanks be to heaven Hood 430 

— the links are broken Pro. 342 



583 



"Weeping 
"Wesley 



Well, then, poor Gay lies under ground - Pope 347 

— then, the promised hour is come at last - Dry. 281 

— they are gone, and here must I remain - Col. 173 
-r thou art happy ----- Byron 230 

— thought ! who would not rather hear - Whi. 245 

— when her day is over, be it said - Eog. 346 

— worthy to be magnified are they - - Wor. 374 

— you have learned to smile - Mer. 453 

— you shall have that song which Leonard Ten. 86 
We'll die with harness on Sha. 808 

— do anything for gold Sha. 756 

— have a swashing and Sha. 210 

Wellington and the ministers - '.-.'- Moore 338 

— Haydon's portrait of— a sonnet - - - Wor. 247 

— Ode on death of • Ten. 246 

Wellington's funeral Ros. 108 

Welsh, Imitated from the - - - Col. 41 

— melodies - Hem. 239 

W^enham, Witch of Whi. 401 

Wentworth, Amy - Whi. 273 

— Lady - • - Lon. 283 

Wepyng and wailyng, care and other sorwe - Cha. 260 

Were it one wasted seed of water-grass P. of F. 71 

— my bosom as false ----- Byron 194 

— my career far brighter still than aught - Byron 264 

— na my heart light I wad die," Remarks on Burns 317 
— - not the crocuses that grew - She. 578 

— not the sinful Mary's tears - - - Moore 344 

— there below, a spot of holy ground - - Wor. 22 

— you but half so wise as you're severe - - Dry. 485 
Were't aught to me I bore the canopy — a sonnet Sha. 1043 
WESLEY, CHARLES, Poems of: 



Abuses of Lay-preaching 
Acts, On passages in Book of 
175, 182, 
Advancing Age, In 

Advent, For 

Afterward 

Anniversary of one's Conversion, 

For the 
Anticipations of Eternity 
Apostacy of his son . 
As long as the cloud abode . 
Ascension Day, For . 
At setting out to preach 
Autobiographic poems 
Beard, Thomas, On Death of 
Believer in Worldly Business, 

For a 

Biblical passages, Hymns on . 
Bigotry, Against .... 
Birthday, On his , 
Child, For a 

— For a new-born 
Christ our Righteousness 

— the Friend of Sinners 
Christian Friends, For . 



31 



Christian Friendship . 

Christmas-Day, For 

Chronicles, On passages in Books 
of ... . 166,173, 

Communion of Saints 

Condemned Criminals, For . 

Conscience, For a tender . 

Constancy, For .... 

Convulsion and Peril, In times of 

Corinthians, On passages in Epis- 
tle to . . . 167,223, 

Country, For one retired in the . 

Criminals, For Condemned 

Danger of losing his Friend, In . 

Dead Orthodoxy .... 

Death. Desiring .... 

— In prospect of . . 137, 

— Near 

— of a Friend, On 

— On his 

Departing, For one . 
Desiring Death . 

— to Love 

Deuteronomy, On passages in 

Book of ... 173, 



&32 
61 

278 
373 
139 
363 
318 
77 



139 

35 
161 

45 
372 

57 
145 

49 
140 

45 



253 



Wesley 

What 



584 



Disappointments, Thanksgiving 
for .... 

Distress and Danger, In 

Doctrinal Hymns 

Doubt, For one in . ... 

Easter Day, For .... 

Ecclesiastes, Hymn on passage 
in 

Epiphany, For the .... 

Epitaphs: Three innocents lie 
buried here .... 

— Wesley, Charles, On 
Eternity, Anticipations of . 
nLxodus, On passages in Book 

of 181, 

Ezekiel, On a passage in Book of 

Faith and Works . 

Fallen, For the .... 

Family, For a 

Father, I have sinned against 

heaven 

— I have sinned .... 
Formalists, For .... 
Foundation, The .... 
Free Grace .... 5, 

— Inquiry 

Friendship, Christian 
Funeral hymn, A 

Galatians, On passage in Epistle 
to 

Genesis, On passages in Book 
of 183, 

Going to a New Habitation, On . 

Grace after Meat 

— before Meat .... 

— For one f alien from 
Great is our redeeming Lord 
Groaning for the Spirit 

Heaven, Of 

Hebrews, On passages in Epistle 

to the . . . . 304, 
Hitchins, Samuel, On Death of 
Horrible Decree, The 
Hosea, Hymn on a passage in 57, 
Husband, For an unconverted 
Hutchinson, John, On Death of 
I am determined to know noth- 
ing 

If death my friend and me divide 

Incarnation 

Invasion, On the expected . 
Invitation, The .... 
Isaiah, On passages in Book 

of 229, 

James, On passage in Epistle to . 
Jeremiah, On a passage in Book 
of .... 164, 
Jesu, the sinner's Friend, to Thee 
Job, On passages in Book of. 

169, 184, 
John, On passages in First Epis- 
tle to . . . . 214, 

— On passages in Gospel of. 

55, 167, 183, 227, 300, 
Jonah, On a passage in Book of . 
Joshua, On passages in Book of 

Journey, On a 

Judges, On passages in Book of 
Kings. On passages in Books of 172, 
Lamentations, On passage in the 
Land's End, At the 



Last verse of Charles Wesley . 58 

— Wish, The 359 

Law, The 173 

Lay-preaching, On . . . .170 
Leviticus, On passages in . 184, 247 
Looking to the Cross . . .326 
Lord, if Thou the grace impart 222 
Lord's Supper, For the . . .69 
Loss of his Friends, On the . 41 
Love, Desiring to ... . 323 

— For 321 

Luke, On passage in Gospel of . 299 
Malachi, On a passage in Book of 291 
Mark, On passages in Gospel of . 298 
Matthew, On passages in Gospel 

of 227,294 



177 

. 291 

1 

. 331 

120 



81 



Means of Grace 

Micah, On a passage in Book of 

Midnight Hymn . 

Morning Hymn 

Mother's Hymn . 

Music, True use of . 

Musician's Hymn 

My son, give me thine heart 

Naomi and Ruth . 

Near Death 

Notice sent one that house was 

marked, Upon 
Numbers, On passages in Book 

of . . 170, 172, 174, 250, 353 
O Lord, incline Thy gracious ear 215 
Oblation of a Sick Child . . 49 
Occasional hymns ... 59 

Old Age, In 135 

Pain, For one in . . . .131 
Passages of Scripture, Hymns on 231 

Penitential 314 

Perfection, On .... 166 
Persecuted, For the ... 24 

Perseverance 198 

Peter, Fust Epistle to, On pas- 
sages in 306 

Philippians, On passages in Epis- 
tle to . . . . 168,355 

Physician's Hymn ... 98 
Polemic Hymns of Charles Wesley 159 
Poor Sinner, A .... 361 

Praise . . . . . .330 

Predestination . . . .201 

Prodigal, The .... 316 

Proverbs, On passages in Book 

of .... 229, 286 

Psalms, On passages in Book of. 

185, 215, 283, 365 
Redemption, Universal . . .186 
Retrospect, A .... 55 

Revelation, On a passage in Book 

of 307 

Romans, On a passage in Book of 175 
Ruth, On a passage in Book of 262 
Samuel, On passages in Books 

of .... 170,266 
Scriptural Hymns . . . .215 

— passages, Hymns on . . 231 
Self-consecration . . . .11 
Sending Child to School, At . 122 
Sickness and Sorrow, In . .134 

— For one in .... 132 
Sinners, turn, why will ye die? . 209 
Sovereign, everlasting Lord . 217 
Submission 360 



585 



Wesley 
What 



Sympathy with Christ , . 327 

Tempest, The 345 

Temptation, At the approach of 348 

— In 351 

Thanksgiving for Disappoint- 
ments 46 

There was silence in Heaven . 307 
Thessalonians, On a passage in 

Epistle to . . . .157 
Three innocents lie buried here 158 

Trial of Faith 21 

Trinity, On the . . . .225 
Tumult, To be sung in a . .26 
Unbelief , For one convinced o£ 308 



Uncertainty, In 
Universal Redemption 
Universities, For the 
Vanity of vanities, all is vanity 
Wakefield, In going to 
Whither shall a creature run 
Whitsunday, For . 
Why will ye die? . 
Widows, For . 
Will ye also go away? 
Woman in travail, For a 
Work, To be sung at . 
Wrestling Jacob 
Youngest, For the 



186 
165 



223 

. 67 
209 

. 125 
338 

. 105 
S3 

. 334 
103 



West, Mrs., Letter to - - White 175 

West-Eastern Divan ------ Goe. 362 

West wind. Ode to the She. 417 

— wind, The ------- Bry. 33 

Westminster abbey, Epitaph for one who 

would not be buried in - Pope 349 

Written in ------ Rog. 250 

Westminster, Abbot of, c. in Richard ii. - Sha. 356 

— bridge, Composed on— a sonnet - - Wor. 241 
Westmoreland, Earl of, c. in Henry iv., pt. 1 Sha. 382 

— — c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 

c. in Henry vi., pt. 3 Sha. 526 

Westmoreland girl, The Wor. 91 

— valley, In a — a sonnet Wor. 230 

Westwood, T. City lyric - - - Flo. 466 

The snowdrop Flo. 19 

Wetheral church, In — a sonnet - - - Wor. 408 

Wha is that at my bower-door? — a song - Burns 269 

— will buy my troggin? ----- Burns 288 
Whan ended was my tale of Melibe - - Cha. 452 

— ended was the lif of seynt Cecile - - Cha. 342 

— folk hadde lawhen of this nice caas - - Cha. 113 

— Phebus dwelt her in this erthe adoun - Cha. 497 

— sayd was this miracle, every man - - Cha. 405 

— that Aprille with his schowres swoote - Cha. 19 

— that the knight had thus his tale i-told - Cha. 95 
Whare are you gaun, my bonny lass? - - Burns 333 

— haeyebeen sae braw, lad? - - - Burns 228 

— sits our sulky, sullen dame - - - Burns 131 
What a lucky turn-up - - - - Moore 628 

— a piece of work is a man ! - ■* Sha. 823 

— a taking was he in Sha. 55 

— a time since I wrote — I'm a sad naughty girl Moore 494 

— ailed young Lucius? ----- jjol. 115 

— ails ye now, ye ----- Burns 67 

— aim had they, the pair of monks - - - Wor. 317 

— alive and so bold, O earth? - - - She. 439 

— all my pretty chickens ----- Sha. 805 

— all the books of ^ges paint - Erne. 280 



What 586 

What am I but the creature thou hast made? Hoi. 198 

— an image of peace and rest - • - . - Lon. 398 

— and how great, the virtue and the art - Pope 282 

— angel can explain ----- Wes. 254 

— are these, so withered and so wild - - Sha. 789 

— are we set on earth for? - Bro. 84 

— art thou, Mighty One ! and where thy seat? White 316 

— art thou presumptuous — a fragment - She. 507 

— aspect bore the man — a sonnet - - - Wor. 328 

— awful perspective ! — a sonnet - - - Wor. 380 

— beast in wilderness or cultured field - - Wor. 365 

— beast of chase hath broken from the cover? Wor. 303 

— beauties doth Flora disclose ! - - Burns 304 

— beckoning ghost, along the moonlight - Pope 90 

— Ben, my old hero ----- Moore 614 

— blessings thy free bounty gives - - Pope 221 

— boot your houses and your lands? - - Low. 62 

— bosom beats not in his country's cause - Pope 93 

— can a young lassie do?— a song - - Burns 236 

— can ennoble sots, or slaves, or cowards? - Pope 216 

— can I do to drive away - Keats 279 

— can I give thee back, O liberal - - - Bro. 154 

— can we reason but from what we know? - Pope 187 

— canst thou do to me, whose good - - Wes. 290 

— care I, so they stand ----- Erne. 113 

— central flowing forces, say - Erne. 281 

— change has made the pastures sweet - - Ing. 85 

— crowd is this? what have we here? - - Wor. 173 

— dawn-pulse at the heart of heaven - - Eos. 235 

— dire offense from amorous causes - - Pope 64 

— do these solemn words portend? - Wes. 270 

— does little birdie say ----- Ten. 377 

— dost thou hear? ------ Wil. 332 

— dost thou in that mansion fair? - - Burns 182 

— doth gravity out of his bed - - - - Sha. 393 

— doth that silence mean? - - - Wes. 307 

— doth this noise of thoughts within my heart Her. 233 

— fairings will ye that I bring? - - - Low. 337 

— features, form, mien, manners, with a mind Cow. 550 

— first inspired a bard of old - - - - Flo. 51 

— first should consecrate as thine - - - Hem. 264 

— five long acts — and all to make us wiser - Gol. 142 

— flecks the outer gray beyond - - - Whi. 309 

— flower is this that greets the morn - - Hoi. 156 

— follies abound ------- Wes. 120 

— fond association draws me hither? - - Byron 266 

— fools these mortals be - Sha. 170 

— form of prayer can serve - Sha. 831 

— gnarled stretch, what depth of shade is his ! Low. 77 

— good, what genius did the pencil move - Pope 397 



587 What 

What God would outwardly alone control - Goe. 257 

— great men have been in love? - - - Sha. 138 

— Greece, when learning nourished, only knew Dry. 498 

— guile is this, that those her golden tresses Spe. 693 

— hangs behind that curtain? - Rog. 158 

— harm has thy poor mirror done - - Goe. 261 

— hath been bringing what shall be - L. of A. 147 

— He — who mid the kindred throng - - Wor. 267 

— heavenly smiles ! O lady mine - - - Wor. 107 

— heroes from the woodland sprung - - Bry. 166 

— hidest thou in thy treasure caves and cells Hem. 338 

— hope of once more meeting is there now Goe. 201 

— I have come for ------ H 1. 233 

— if a soul redeemed, a spirit that loved - Hoi. 203 

— if our numbers barely could defy — a sonnet Wor. 274 

— imports the nomination of this - - Sha. 843 

— in France has passed by - - Goe. 274 

— is a church? " Let truth and reason speak Cra. 320 

— is a mine — a treasury — a dower - - - Hood 174 

— is a poet's love? ------ Hoi. 81 

— is all the world to me? - - - - - Wes. 301 

— is ambition? 'Tis a glorious cheat - - Wil. 100, 313 

— is by this stir revealed? Goe. 376 

— is good for a bootless bene?" - - - Wor. 423 
• is it you ask me, darling? - - - Pro. 177 

--is life, father?" Pro. 61 

— is merciful censure? ----- Goe. 273 

— is prudery? 'Tis a beldam - Pope 377 

— is science, rightly known ... - Goe. 262 

— is so rare as a day in June? (Lowell.) - Flo. 334 

— is the bigot's torch ------ Fav. 205 

— is the task that to the muse belongs? - Tho. 397 

— is the opinion of Pythagoras? - - - Sha. 299 

— is the sorriest thing that enters - - Ros. 268 

— is the thing esteemed by few - Sen. 196 

— is there in the vale of life - Cow. 102 

— is this fleshly fetter of a day - - - Wil. 321 

— is this I read in story ?--•--- Lon. 406 

— is this strange and uncouth thing - - Her. 265 

— is this world at best ----- White 219 

— is yonder white thing in the forest - - Goe. 147 

— is your substance, whereof are you made Sha. 1034 

— knight or what vassal will be so bold - - Sch. 159 

— know we of the blest above - Wor. 296 

— lack the valleys and mountains - - - Pro. 130 

— lost the king his regal power? - - - Wes. 268 

— lovelier home could gentle fancy choose - Wor. 293 

— makes a plenteous harvest - - - Vir. 52 

— makes the healing art divine? - - - Hoi. 149 

— makes the trooper's frozen courage? - Scott 578 



What 588 

What makes time short to me? - - - Goe. 

— makes us shrink in horror from our - Byron 

— man dare, I dare Sha. 

— man would live coffined with brick - - Low. 

— masque of what old wind- withered - - Ros. 

— Mary is when she a little smiles - - She. 

— matters it to those, my fellow-men - Byron 

— mean the joyous sounds from yonder - Sch. 

— means yon apparition in the sky - - - Tho. 

— men gain fairly — a fragment - - - She. 

— mighty contests rise from trivial things - Pope 

— mischief cleaves to unsubdued regret - Wor. 

— more felicitie can fall to creature - - Spe. 

— multitudes the curse shall feed - - - Wes. 

— nature, alas ! has denied - Cow. 

— nature makes in any mood - - - Low. 

— need of clamorous bells - Wor. 

— needs my Shakespeare for his honored bones Mil. 

— needs this din about the town - - Burns 

— news to-day? — Oh ! worse and worse - Moore 

— no way left to shun th' inglorious stage - Gol. 

— Nostradame, with all his art can guess - Dry. 

— numbers shall the muse repeat - - Burns 

— of her glass without her? * Ros. 

— of the day? ------- Whi. 

— of the end, Pandora? was it thine - - Ros. 

— other woman could be loved like you - - Ros. 

— pain it was to drown Sha. 

— phantom is this that appears - - - Lon. 

— place so strange— though unrevealed - Ros. 

— plant we in this apple-tree? - - - - Bry. 

— pleasure to me ------ Goe. 

— portents, from what distant regions, ride - Cow. 

— potions have I drunk of siren tears — a sonnet Sha. 

— private griefs they have - Sha. 

— profits prayer itself, unless - Wes. 

— pulls at my heart so? - - - - * Goe. 

— rabbi Jehosha said ------ Low. 

— say the bells of San Bias - Lon. 

— shall be said of this embattled day - - Ros. 

— shall I ask but thee? Wes. 

— shall I call thee, my blossom ... Flo. 

— shall I teach thee the very first - - Goe. 

— shall these clothes manifold - Cha. 

— shall we add now? ----- Bro. 

— should be said of him cannot be said - - Lon. 

— shut the gardens ! lock the latticed gate ! Hood 

— slender youth bedewed with liquid odors - Mil. 

— smoldering senses in deaths - - - Ros, 

— so good for banished sorrow - - - Sch. 



589 "What 

What soared the old eagle to die - - - Wit. 232 

— Sophocles could undertake alone - - Dry. 518 

— sort of a life, I would like to know - - Fav. 297 

— sounds are those, Helvellyn - Wor. 553 

— state of life can be so blessed - . - Dry. 559 

— still those two infernal questions - - Moore 640 
4- strange wonder is this? - - - - Sch. 225 

— strong allurement draws - Wor. 250 

— stronger breastplate than a heart untainted Sha. 513 

— terror of the Lord will ye abide? - P. of F. 156 

— the bee is to the floweret - Moore 239 

— the birds said - Whi. 315 

— the dickens his name - - - - - Sha. 53 

— the immortal confide to thy keeping - - Lon. 346 

— the voice said - - Whi. 122 

— thing unto mine ear - Eos. 95 

— think you the dead are?" - - - - She. 574 

— thou, with thy genius, thy youth - Moore 601 

— thou wouldst highly Sha. 791 

— though around thee blazes - Whi. 67 

— though the accused, upon his own appeal Wor. 428 

— though the Italian pencil - Wor. 296 

— thousands never knew the road ! - - Cow. 91 

— time I lay these anear thy feet - - - Bro. 73 

— time I wasted youthful hours - Ten. 484 

— time our Lord still walked - Goe. 245 

— time resentment burned in Juno's breast Dante 103 

— time the mighty moon was gathering light Ten. 19 

— trick of memory ------ Wor. 425 

— tuneful strains salute mine ear - - - Goe. 100 

— unveils to me the yearning glow - - Sch. 2Q 

— various attitudes and ways - - - Moore 581 

— various hindrances we meet - - - Cow. 71 

— virtue is so fitting for a knight - - - Spe. 435 

— virtue, or what mental grace - - - Cow. 408 

— visionary tints the year puts on - - - Low. 69 

— wakest thou, spring? ----- Hem. 421 

— was he doing, the great god Pan - - - Bro. 607 

— was the end? I am ashamed - - - Lon. 279 

— way does the wind come? - - ■ - - Wor. 80 

— we all think Hoi. 165 

— we have, we prize not Sha. 127 

— wealth cannot buy Cow. 520 

— were I love — a sonnet Low. 19 

— will I do gin my hoggie die? - - - Burns 217 

— will not woman, when she loves? - - Rog. 220 

— will the line stretch out - Sha. 802 

— wish can friendship form for thee - - Hem. 263 

— wonder man should fail to stay - - Ing. 116 

— wonder that I loved her thus - - - Mer. 189 



What KQfi 

When oyu 

What wondrous noise is heard around ! - Goe. 263 

— would I have you do? - - - - - Fav. 323 

— wouldst thou have, O soul - - - Pro. 363 

— wreath of gods, or wicked influence - - Spe. 587 

— you are stepping westward?" - - - Wor. 256 
Whate'er a living flame may surround - - Goe. 256 

— I ask, I surely know - - - - - Wes. 266 
Whatever I do, and whatever I say - - Hoi. 187 

— is, is right ----- Pope 194, 214, 220 

— man he be whose heavy mind - - - Spe. 667 

— things be sweet and fair - Fav. 279 
What's done cannot be undone - - - Sha. 806 

— done we partly may compute - - - Burns 78 

— fame with men, by custom - Pope 397 

— gone and what's past help - - - Sha. 316 

— hallowed ground? Has earth a clod - - Cam. 213 

— Hecuba to him or he to - - - - Sha. 825 

— her history? ------- Sha. 289 

— in a name? that which we call a rose - Sha. 720 

— in the brain that ink may character Sha. 1041 ; Fav. 17 

— life but full of care and doubt - Hood 458 

— mine is yours and what is yours is mine - Sha. 92 

— my thought like? ----- Moore 327 

— the best thing in the world? - - - - Bro. 603 

— this? a wood — what's that? one calleth - Ing. 517 
Whatsoever eyes terrene be the sweetest - Bro. 101 
Wheel the wild dance — a song - Scott 396 
Wheeler, Daniel ------- Whi. 136 

Wheer, asta bean saw long - Ten. 381 

Whelpdale, Mrs. (To Chloris.) - - Burns 145 

When? -------- Ten. 492 

— a bar of pure silver or ingot of gold - - Cow. 406 

— a deed is done for freedom - Low. 67 ; Fav. 363 

— a lover clasps his fairest — a fragment - She. 508 

— Alcuin taught the sons of Charlemagne - Lon. 295 

— all around grew drear and dark - - Byron 224 

— all of genius which can perish dies - - Byron 275 

— all the fiercer passions cease - Cra. 497 ; Fav. 179 

— all thy waves and storms are past - - Wes. 306 

— all within is peace - Cow. 416 

— Alpine vales threw forth a suppliant cry Wor. 373 

— are the lessons given ----- Hem. 319 

— as the garish day is done - - •- - - Bry. 98 

— as thy eye hath chose the dame - - - Sha. 1053 

— Athens all the Grecian state did guide - Dry. 488 

— Aulus, the nocturnal thief, made prize - Cow. 521 

— Bacchus first beheld the desolate - - Bro. 173 

— Bacchus, Jove's immortal boy - - Moore 47 

— beechen buds begin to swell - Bry. 23 ; Flo. 44 

— beggars die there are no comets seen - - Sha. 772 



PLQ1 What 

^ VL When 

When biting Boreas, fell and dowre - - Burns 63 

— blessed Mary wiped her Savior's feet - - Her. 275 

— blooming spring ------ Tho. 464 

— breezes are soft and skies are fair - - Bry. 27 

— Britain first, at Heaven's command Tho. 473 ; Fav. 334 

— British freedom for an happier land - Col. 95 

— by a generous public's kind acclaim - Burns 104 

— by night the frogs are croaking - - Lon. 94 

— by sensations of delight or pain - - Dante 131 

— by the broad stream thou dost dwell - Goe. 236 

— by the brook his strain ----- Goe. 364 

— by the green-wood side, at summer eve - Eog. 340 

— Cain was driven from Jehovah's land - Eliot 5 

— casting many a look behind - Moore 69 

— cats run home and light is come - - - Ten. 11 

— chapman billies leave the street - - Burns 131 

— Charles was deceived by the maid he loved Moore 300 

— chill November s surly blast - Burns 49 ; Fav. 249 

— clouds do come together — a song - - Burns 196 

— cold in the earth ___-._ Moore 256 

— coldness wraps this suffering day - Byron 193 

— contemplation, like the night-calm felt - Wor. 527 

— Cupid sees my beard of snow - - - Moore 59 

— daffodils begin to peer ----- Sha. 318 

— daisies pied and violets blue - - - Sha. 160 

— dark December glooms the day - - - Scott 80 

— darkness long has veiled my mind - - Cow. 78 

— daylight was yet sleeping under the billow Moore 229 

— death's dark stream I ferry o'er - - Burns 178 

— Denmark's raven soared on high - - - Scott 203 

— descends on the Atlantic - Lon. 86 

— did friendship take ----- gha. 189 

— Diogenes quietly sunned himself - - Goe. 270 

— disappearing from our hemisphere - Dante 310 

— do I see thee most, beloved one ? - - Ros. 228 

— earth shall quake with quaking - P. of F. 120 

— eastern lovers feed the funeral fire - - Pope 386 

— energizing objects men pursue " - - Byron 250 

— Eve had led her loved away - - - Hoi. 168 

— factious rage to cruel exile drove - - Dry. 276 

— faint and o'er sorrow's desert wild - - Col. 47 

— faith and love which parted from thee never Mil. 477 

— far and wide — a sonnet - Wor. 276 

— fierce conflicting passions urge - - Byron 152 

— fifty years between you and your well-kept Whi. 391 

— first, descending from the moorlands - - Wor. 497 

— first I began for to sigh - Burns 291 

— first I cam to be a man - Burns 332 

— first I came to Stewart Kyle - - - Burns 197 

— first I met thee --"-.- Moore 249 



When 592 

When first I saw fair Jeainnie's face - - Burns 222 

— first I saw our banner wave - Whi. 265 

— first my brave Johnnie lad - Burns 243 

— first my lines of heavenly joys made mention Her. 192 

— first that horse within whose populous - Eos. 269 

— first that smile ----- Moore 530 

— first the ark was landed on the shore - Dry. 495 

— first the fiery-mantled sun - Cam. 177 

— first the friendship flower - Flo. 323 

— first thou didst entice to thee my heart - Her. 128 

— first thy sweet and gracious eye - - Her. 273 

— for our sakes, your hero you resigned - Dry. 45 

— fortune means to men ... - Sha. 345 

— forty winters shall besiege thy brow - - Sha. 1028 

— found the rose delight in her fair hue? - Ing. 397 

— freedom from the land of Spain - - - Bry. 93 

— freedom on her natal day - Whi. 57 

— friends are met o'er merry cheer - - - Scott 548 

— friendship or love our sympathies move Byron 156 

— freshly blows the northern gale - - Moore 151 

— from our better selves we have too long - Wor. 526 

— from the opening chambers of the east - Tho. 396 

— from the sacred garden driven - Fav. 302 

— from thee weeping I removed - - - Bro. 74 

— from their game of dice men separate - Dante 138 

— fruitful Clydesdale's apple-bowers - - Scott 458 

— gentle twilight sits ----- Fav. 210 

— God at first made man - - - Her. 259 ; Fav. 406 

— God fashioned paradise - - - P. of F. 171 

— gold, as fleet as zephyr's pinion - - Moore 52 

— Grammont graced these happy springs - Moore 206 

— Guilford good our pilot stood - - Burns 203 

— Hagar found the bottle spent - - - Cow. 86 

— haughty expectations prostrate lie - - Wor. 237 

— he had spoke the sinner raised his hands Dante 85 

— he shall die take him ----- Sha. 727 

— he who adores thee Moore 215 

— he who from the scourge of wrong - - Bry. 36 

— head and heart are busy - - - - Goe. 223 

— heats as of a tropic clime ... - Whi. 294 

— heaven had overturned the Trojan state - Vir. 171 

— here with Carthage Eome to conflict came Wor. 314 

— high romance o'er every wood and stream White 370 

— hostile elements with rage - - - - Sen. 286 

— human touch (as monkish books attest) - Wor. 239 

— I am dead. (Emma Alice Browne.) - - Fav. 131 

— I am old. (Caroline A. Briggs.) - - Fav. 55 

— I am inclined to be serious - Eog. 117 

— I attain to utter forth ... - Bro. 89 

— I behold that beauty's wonderment - - Spe. 691 



593 



When 



When I behold the festive train - • - Moore 49 

— I compare what I have lost - Lob. 413 

— I consider everything that grows - - Sha. 1030 

— I consider how my light is spent - - - Mil. 480 

— I contemplate all alone - Ten. 200 

— I do count the clock — a sonnet - - - Sha. 1029 

— I do sit apart Ing. 454 

— I dream that you love me - - - Byron 141 

— I drink, I feel, I feel Moore 47 

— I had lost one shaft ------- Sha. 182 

— I have borne in memory what has tamed Wor. 272 

— I have seen thy snowy wing - - Moore 117 

— I have seen by time's fell hand Sha. 1036 ; Fav. 19 

— I hear the waters fretting - Ing. 225 

— I hear you express an affection so warm Byron 136 

— I love thee not, Chaos is come - - - Sha. 893 

— I loved you, I can't but allow - - - Moore 135 

— I made answer, I began -->;.- Eos. 143 

— I reflect how little I have done - - - Ing. 443 

— I remember them those friends of mine - Lon. 364 

— I roved a young Highlander - - - Byron 173 

— I sit musing on the checkered past - White 369 

— I sit on market days amid the comers - Ing. 510 

— I survey the bright - Flo. 436 

— I tell him he hates flatterers - Sha. 771 

— I think on the happy days — a song - Burns 290 

— I upon thy bosom lean - • - Burns 326 

— I was a beggarly boy ----- Low. 344 

— I was a little child ----- Wes. 316 

— I was born, from all the seas - - - Eme. 121 

— I was in my se'enteenth year - - - Burns 300 

— I was still a youthful wight - - - Goe. 206 

— icicles hang by the wall - - - - Sha. 160 

— in a May-day hush - ~ - - - Ing. 214 

— in death I shall calm recline - - - Moore 220 

— in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes - Sha. 1031 

— in spring the gentle rain - Goe. 397 

— in the antique age of bow and spear - - Wor. 455 

— in the chronicle of wasted time - - Sha. 1041 

— in the dance of the nymphs - Goe. 270 

— insect wings are glistening in the beam - Bry. 37 

— Israel of the Lord beloved - Scott 422 

— I've a saxpence under my thumb - - Burns 332 

— Januar' wind was blawing cauld - - Burns 274 

— king Cophetua loved the beggar-maid - Sha. 719 

— last before her people's face - Bro. 260 

— last we passed these sylvan wilds - - Flo. 283 

— legislators keep the law - Hoi. 168 

— Lelia touched the lute - Moore 298 

— liberty lives loud on every lip Mer. 220 



Wlien 



594 



When life hath run its largest round - - Hoi. 

— life his lusty course began - Fav. 

— life looks lone and dreary - Moore 

— little more than boy in age - - - - Cow. 

— long sequestered from his throne - - Cow. 

— looking on the present face of things - - Wor. 

— lost in tears, the blood his veins - - Flo. 

— love begins to sicken Sha. 7 

— love came first to earth - Cam. 

— love was a child - - - - - Moore 

— lovely woman stoops to folly - - - Gol. 

— lyart leaves bestrew the yird - - Burns 

— Maggie and I was acquaint ... Burns 

— man, expelled from Eden's bowers - Byron 

— marshaled on the mighty plain White 



— Mazarvan the magician ----- Lon. 

— merry hearts were gay - Burns 

— midnight came to close the year - - Moore 

— 'midst the gay I meet - • - - - Moore 

— Minerva to give pleasure - - - - ' Goe. 

— mortal man resigns his breath - - - Wes. 

— most I wink then do mine eyes best see - Sha. 

— musing on companions gone - Scott 

— my abode's prefixed time is spent - - Spe. 

— my breast labors with oppressive care - Tho. 

— my devotions could not pierce - Her. 

— my last sunset is under a cloud - - Fav. 

— my love swears that she is made of truth Sha. 1044, 

— my Savior, shall I be - - - - - Wes. 

— my thirsty soul I steep - - - - Moore 

— Napoleon was flying Cam. 

— nature her great masterpiece designed Burns 

— nature tries her finest touch - - - Flo. 

— now the Thunderer on the sea-beat coast - Iliad 

— o'er the chords thy fingers stray - - Sch. 

— o'er the hill the eastern star - Burns 

— o'er the street the morning peal is flung - Hoi. 

— on the lip the sigh delays - - - Moore 

— on thy pillow lying ----- Goe. 

— one that holds communion with the skies - Cow. 

— our two souls stand up erect - Bro. 

— passion's trance is overpast - She. 

— Persia's scepter trembled in a hand - Low. 

— Philoctetes in the Lemnian isle - - - Wor. 

— Phoebus bright, the azure skies - - Burns 

— pride and envy ------ White 

— princely Hamiltons abode - - - - Scott 

— rose the cry "Great Pan is dead ! " - Hoi. 

— rosy May comes in wi' flowers - - - Burns 

— Russia hurried to the field - - - - Scott 



139 

218 
300 
610 
465 
273 
188 
780 
252 
528 
138 
55 
304 
230 
357 
229 
331 
121 
653 
247 
267 

1033 
55 
695 
413 
166 
131 
1050 

360 
46 

253 

169 

346 

273 
24 

242 

102 

655 
57 

194 

158 

441 

335 

244 

327 

372 

350 

312 

222 
63 






595 When 

When Ruth was left half desolate - - Wor. 176 

— seven years were come and gone - - Scott 339 

— shall we three meet again? - - - Sha. 788 

— she had passed it seemed like the ceasing - Lon. 96 

— simple Macer, now of high renown - - Pope 371 

— slow disease with all her host of pains Byron 161 

— soft winds and sunny skies — a fragment - She. 508 

— some beloved voice Bro. 83 

— some beloveds 'neath - - - - - Bro. 81 

— sorrows come, they come not single spies - Sha. 836 

— sounds the trumpet at the judgment - Goe. 219 

— sparrows build and the leaves break forth Ing. 46 

— spring begems the dewy scene - - Moore 44 

— spring to woods and ----- Brv. 73 

— stout Achilles heard. (W. L.) - Spe. 24 

— success exalts thy lot Erne. 299 

— summer's sunny hues adorn - Flo. 326 

— sycamores were throwing - Flo. 488 

— that dead face borrowed in the - - - Eos. 245 

— that the poor have cried - Sha. 777 

— the age is in the wit is out - Sha. 125 

— the Balaika ------- Moore 662 

— the blest seed of Terah's faithful son - - Mil. 505 

— the blind suppliant in the way - - - Bry. 319 

— the brains were out the ----- Sha. 799 

— the breath divine is flowing - - - Whi. 89 

— the breeze of a joyful dawn - - - - Ten. 11 

— the bright stars came out last night - Pro. 182 

— the British warrior queen - Cow. 432 

— the days are silent all -- Mer. 236 

— the dying flame of day ----- Lon. 8 

— the east lightens with strange hints of morn Mer. 461 

— the firmament quivers Bry. 125 

— the first summer bee ----- Moore 534 

— the fox dies, his skin counts - Goe. 21 

— the gledd's in the blue cloud - - - Scott 417 

— the grave shall open for me - - - - Flo. 39 

— the green earth beneath the zephyr's wing Hoi. 16 

— the happy appear I forget the gods - - Sch. 249 

— the heart is light with hope - - - Rog. 13 

— the heathen trumpets 1 clang - Scott 412 

— the heavy laden sigh ----- Goe. 368 

— the hours of day are numbered - Lon. 4 

— the lamp is shattered ----- She. 444 

— the last flush of eve is dying - - - Hem. 245 

— the last hope of trampled France had failed She. 101 

— the last reader reads no more - . - Hoi. 13 

— the last sunshine of expiring day - - Byron 275 

— the latest strife is lost and all is done with - Mer. 222 

— the lone pilgrim views afar - - - Scott 414 



"When 
"Where 



596 



When the long murmur of applause - - Lon. 283 

— the Lord would fashion men - - -P. of F. 38 

— the moist and balmy gale ------ Goe. 398 

— the moon is on the wave - Byron 89 

— the pine tosses its cones - Erne. 43 

— the prime mover of my many sighs - Lon. 393 

— the primeval all-holy Father - - - Goe. 179 

— the Puritans came over - - - Hoi. 32 

— the radiant morn of creation broke Bry . 77 ; Fav. 369 

— the reaper's task was ended - - - Whi. 229 

— the sad soul, by care and grief oppressed - Cra. 221 

— the sheep are in the fauld - Burns 330 

— the soft hand of sleep— an ode - - - Wor. 284 

— the summer breezes have died away - Flo. 277 

— the summer fields are mown - - - Lon. 231 

— the sun is withered up - - - -P. of F. 73 

— the tempest's at the loudest - - - Scott 536 

— the trumpet shall be ringing - - P. of F. 140 

— the trumpet shall sound - - - P. of F. 130 

— the unshunned day arriveth - -' - P. of F. 24 

— the vain triumph of the imperial lord - Byron 257 

— the vine again is blowing - Goe. 44 

— the warm sun that brings - Lon. 6 

— the weariness of life is ended - Pro. 192 

— the winds blow in the sweet rose-tree - - Flo. 408 

— the winter wind whistles along the - - White 259 

— those renowned noble peers of Greece - - Spe. 694 

— thou shalt be disposed to set me light - Sha. 1038 

— thou shalt wander ----- Moore 531 

— through life unblest we rove - - - Moore 232 

— through the nations stalks contagion wild Goe. 218 

— through the piazetta ----- Moore 532 

— thy great soul was freed from mortal - - Wor. 359 

— time, or soon or late, shall bring - - Byron 247 

— time was entwining the garland of years Moore 79 

— time, who steals our years away - - Moore 84 

— to the attractions of the busy world - Wor. 139 

— to the common rest that crowns our day - Bry. 11 

— to the sessions of sweet silent thought - Sha. 1031 

— to their airy hall, my father's voice - Byron 131 

— treason first began the strife - - - Hoi. 261 

— trees did bud and fields were green - Burns 308 

— true hearts lie withered - - - Flo. 104 

— Turnus had assembled all his powers - - Vir. 292 

— Turnus saw the Latians learve the field - Vir. 396 

— twilight dews ------ Moore 654 

— twilight steals along the ground - - White 360 

— unto thee I sent the page all white - - Goe. 218 

— vain desire at last, and vain - - - Eos. 276 

— we can calmly gain or lose - Fav. 179 



597 



When 
"Where 



When we condemn millions in the mass - Rog. 110 

— we first met and loved Bro. 162 

— we had passed the threshold of the gate - Dante 153 

— we have shuffled off this mortal coil - - Sha. 826 

— we two parted Byron 228 

— wearied wretches sink to sleep - - Moore 73 

— wild war's deadly blast was blawn - - Burns 251 

— will the streams be aweary of flowing - Ten. 466 

— winds that move not its calm surface - She. 533 

— winter winds are piercing chill - - - Lon. 7 

— wise Ulysses from his native coasts - Pope 360 

— wit and genius meet their doom - - - Cow. 395 

— with a Reaumur's skill thy curious mind Rog. 211 

— with a serious musing ----- Flo. 159 

— ye say Kismat, say it wittingly - - P. of F. 138 

— ye stood up in the house - Bro. 180 

— years have rolled by - - - - - Byron 255 

— you do dance I wish you a wave - - - Sha. 320 

— you have them they are not - Sha. 182 

— young and full of sanguine hope - - - Wes. 55 

— youth his fairy reign began - - - Col. 34 
Whence art thou, flower? From holy ground Hem. 325 

— came his feet into my field - - - Ros. 275 

— came ye : and the people of the groves P. of F. 121 

— comes our friend so hastily - - - Goe. 121 

— is it, that amazed I hear ... - Cow. 486 

— that low voice? — a sonnet - - - - Wor. 331 

— the brooch of burning gold - Scott 266 

— this delay? Along the quiet street - - Rog. 106 
Whene'er a noble deed is wrought - - - Lon. 222 

— I see those smiling eyes - Moore 258 

— I view those lips of thine - - - Byron 135 

— my Father in the skies -■-.-- Wes. 273 
Where am I, the halls are gilded - - - Pro. 163 

— are the joys I have met in the morning - Burns 257 

— are the poets unto whom belong - - - Lon. 414 

— are the swallows fled? - Pro. 47 

— are they now, those wanton boys? - - Wor. 175 

— are they, those green fairy islands, reposing Hem. 240 

— are those honors, Ida ! - - - Byron 137 

— are we going, Rubee? Whi. 200 

— are you going, soldiers Hoi. 250 

— art thou, beloved to-morrow? - - - She. 440 

— art thou, muse - - - Sha. 1040 ; Fav. 17 

— art thou, my beloved son - - - - Wor. Ill 

— be the noisy followers of the game - - Wor. 305 

— be the sweet delights of learning's treasure Spe. 583 

— be the temples, which, in Britain's isle - Wor. 98 

— be you going, you Devon maid ? - - Keats 264 

— braving angry winter's storms - - Burns 207 



Where 
While 



598 



Where but on yonder tree? - Wes. 282 

— Cart rins rowin' to the sea ... Burns 241 

— ceaseless spring her garland twines - - Whi. 392 

— Claribel low lieth ------ Ten. 7 

— dwellest thou? Under the canopy - - Sha. 677 

— ends our chancel in a vaulted space - - Cra. 326 

— girt around by savage foes - - - Hoi. 274 

— go the poet lines? ------ Hoi. 81 

— goestthou? Where? Goe. 118 

— got'st thou that goose look? - Sha. 807 

— graced with many a classic spoil - - Col. 35 

— hast thou floated, in what seas pursued - Cow. 422 

— holy ground begins, unhallowed ends - Wor. 242 

— houses thick and sewers annoy the air - Mil. 203 

— Humber pours his rich commercial stream Cow. 386 

— is another sweet as my sweet ... Ten. 490 

— is any author in the world teaches - - Sha. 149 

— is now the smile that lightened - - Moore 123 

— is the giant of the sun ... - Ten. 483 

— is the maiden of mortal strain - Scott 233 

— is the Moloch of your father's creed - Hoi. 197 

— is the nymph whose azure eye - - Moore 92 

— is the summer with her golden sun? - Hem. 142 

— is the true man's fatherland ? Low. 13 

— is your dwelling, ye sainted? - - - Moore 351 

— kings have been by mob elections - Moore 570 

— lies the land to which yon ship must go - Wor. 232 

— lives the man who has not tried - - - Scott 237 

— London's column, pointing at the skies - Pope 251 

— long and deeply — a sonnet - Wor. 364 

— met our bards of old?— the glorious throng Hem. 326 

— O where are the visions of morning - - Hoi. 209 

— order in variety we see - Pope 97 

— over heathen doom-rings and gray-stones - Whi. 377 

— rivers smoothest run, deep are the fords Byron 257 

— rural melodies in concert swell - - Byron 256 

— shall my wandering soul begin? - - Wes. 6 

— shall the lover rest Scott 66 

— shall true believers go - Wes. 381 

— shall we bury our shame? - Moore 535 

— slumber abbots, purple as their wines - Pope 173 

— sucks the bee now? Summer is flying - Hem. 374 

— the bee sucks, there suck I Sha. 18 

— the copse-wood is the greenest - Flo. 117 

— the golden corn is bending ■- - - Pro. 174 

— the great lake's sunny smiles - Whi. 299 

— the little babbling streamlet - - - Pro. 287 

— the Norweyan banners flout the sky - - Sha. 789 

— the pathway begins eternity seems - - Sch. 262 

— the Red Lion, staring o'er the way - - Gol. 133 



599 



Where 
"While 



Where time the measure of his hours - - Whi. 87 

— towers are crushed and unforbidden weeds Wor. 320 

— wad bonny Annie lie? " Remarks on - Burns 336 

— where are all the birds that sang - - Fav. 108 

— where was Roderick then? - - - Scott 156 

— will a place of refuge ----- s c h. 288 

— will they stop, those breathing powers - Wor. 206 
Whereas my birth and spirit rather took - Her. 37 
Whereat with blade, with bloody blameful Sha. 177 
Where'er I am, whate'er I do - - - - Wes. 238 

— we tread, 'tis haunted holy ground - - Byron 301 
Wherefore add ye ills to life which is so evil L. of A. 85 

— and whence we are ye cannot know L. of A. 42 

— are these things hid ----- Sh.a. 283 

— doth vain antiquity so vaunt - - - Spe. 703 

— drag me to yon glittering eddy - - - Goe. 49 

— dwell so sad and lonely " - - - - Pro. 68 

— ever ramble on Goe. 226 

— is truth so far from our eyes? - - - Goe. 369 

— little fluttering thing ----- Flo. 379 

— should I make my moan - Wes. 49 
Where's Agnes? ------- Bro. 603 

— the coward that would not dare - - Scott 79 

— the poet? show him! show him! - - Keats 274 
Wheresoever thou wanderest in space - - Sch. 248 
Whereunto is money good? -.-..-- Lon. 93 
Wherever I am, and whatever I do - Dry. 551 

Whet the bright steel - Scott 421 

Whether in sea or fire, in earth - - - Sha. 812 

— my heart hath wiser grown or not - - Low. 25 

— the charmer sinner it or saint it - - Pope 232 

— the fruitful Nile or Tyrian shore - - - Dry. 274 

— the idle prisoner through his grate - - Low. 48 

— those peals of praise ----- gha. 193 

— 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer - - Sha. 826 

— we shall meet again ----- Sha. 784 
Which bounty of his Lord will he deny? - P. of F. 158 

— is the weakest thing of all - - - - Bro. 77 

— religion do I acknowledge? - - - Sch. 255 

— shall to all our nights and days - - - Sha. 791 

— way I fly is hell ; myself and hell - - 1 lil. 85 
While about the shore of Mona - - - Ten. 393 

— Anna's peers and early playmates tread Wor. 244 

— at the stook the shearers cower - - Burns 159 

— beams of orient light — a sonnet - - Wor. 250 

— briers and woodbines budding green - Burns 152 

— Celia's tears make sorrow bright - - Pope 445 

— Europe's eye is fixed on mighty things Burns 139 

— far along the eastern sky - - - - Hoi. 246 

— fixed in thought the pensive hero sate Odys. 253 



Wliile 
White 



600 



While flattering crowds officiously appear 

— flowing rivers yield a blameless sport - 

— fops in soft Italian verse - 

— from the purpling east departs - 

— gained forever I shall dare to grow - 

— gazing on the moon's light - 

— great events were on the gale - 

— he is marked by vision clear 

— he remembers with a sigh - 

— history's muse ----- 

— I touch the string ... - 

— in full choir the solemn requiem swells 

— in heroic numbers some relate - 

— larks with little wing - - - 

— memory holds a seat in this distracted globe 

— Merlin paced the Cornish sands - 

— midnight shades the earth o'erspread 

— my young cheek retains its healthful hues 

— new-ca'd kye rowte at the stake 

— Norman Tancred in Salerno reigned - 

— not a leaf seems faded — a sonnet 

— on the cliff with calm delight 

— one with moderate haste - 

— our rosy fillets shed -.-•-..- 

— pensive poets painful vigils keep 

— poring antiquarians search the ground 

— ripening corn grew thick and deep - 

— secret leaguing nations from around - 

— singly thus along the rim we walked 

— that my soul repairs to her devotion - 

— the angry sea was roaring - 

— the dawn on the mountain was misty - 

— the gray mists of early dawn 

— the poor gather round, till the end of time 

— the sky of June the soft - 

— these affairs in distant places passed 

— thirteen moons saw smoothly run 

— through the broken pane the tempest 

— thus from theme to theme the historian 

— thus the hero's pious cares attend - 

— thus the weary wanderer sunk to rest 

— time a grim old lion gnawing lay 

— virgin spring, by Eden's flood 

— we invoke the wreathed spring 

— winds frae aff Ben Lomond blaw - 

— with the public, you, my lord, lament 

— you. great patron of mankind ! 

— you here do snoring lie 
Whilom, as olde stories tellen us 

— love was like a fire 



Dry. 


40 


- Wor. 


229 


Burns 


339 


- Wor. 


433 


I. S. S. 


27 


Moore 


228 


Scott 


95 


- Goe. 


229 


Fav. 


23 


Moore 


250 


Moore 


526 


White 


226 


Tho. 


457 


Burns 


254 


3 Sha. 


818 


- Wor. 


321 


Wes. 


1 


! Col. 


198 


Burns 


153 


- Dry. 


434 


Wor. 


236 


- Rog. 


246 


Sha. 


815 


Moore 


45 


Pope 


125 


-Wor. 


245 


Ing. 


47 


- Tho. 


431 


Dante 


211 


- Her. 


148 


Fav. 


150 


Scott 


215 


- Pro. 


317 


Wor. 


389 


- Fav. 


83 


Vir. 


314 


- Cow. 


441 


Rog. 


233 


- Wor. 


676 


Iliad 


260 


Odys. 


87 


Ing. 


437 


Burns 


137 


Moore 


49 


Burns 


150 


Tho. 


432 


- Pope 


297 


Sha. 


9 


• Cha. 


42 


Lon. 


94 



601 



"While 
White 



Whilom ther was dwellyng at Oxenford - Cha. 97 

— ther was dwellyng in Lombardy - - Cha. 261 

— ther was dwellyng in my countrie - - Cha. 207 
Whilst I alone did call upon thy aid - - Sha. 1037 

— the smiling earth ye governed - - - Sch. 82 

— thou, Mohassan (happy thou !) - - Moore 312 

— me not such honest knaves - Sha. 879 
Whirligig of time brings in - - - - Sha. 303 
Whisperings heard by wakeful maids - - Moore 528 
Whistle and I'll come to you — a song - - Burns 208 

— o'er the lave o't — a song - - - Burns 228 

— The Burns 120 

WHITE, HENRY KLRKE, Poems of: 



Admonitory sentences . . .47 
iEolian Harp, On hearing an— a 

sonnet ..... 315 
Ah ! who can say . . . 369 
And must thou go? . . .369 
April, Sonnet to . . . .346 
As thus oppressed with many a 

care 345 

Athanatos 267 

Aunt, Letter to his . . .169 
Awake, sweet harp of Judah . 354 
Be hushed, be hushed— a ballad 316 
Bethlehem, Star of . . . .357 
Blackett, J., Monody on . . 230 
Bloomfield, Robert, Epigram on . 365 

Canzonet 262 

Carlisle, Earl of, Ode to . . 322 
Charlesworth, Letters to. 

71, 109, 135, 140, 153, 202 

Childhood 236 

Christiad, The— a divine poem . 399 
Christmas, 1804 . . . . . 351 

Clifton Grove 281 

Come, Anna!— a pastoral . . 335 
Confined to School, On being . 13 
Consumption, Sonnet to . . 348 
Contemplation, To . . . . 326 
Correspondents, Address to . 28 
Cowper, Hay ley's epitaph to . 460 

— Inscription to. (Hay ley.) . 461 
Dance of the Consumptives . . 248 
Dashwood, John, Letter to . 152 
Death, Eve of 264 

— On the prospect of . . .334 

— (" Thanatos ") . . . . 266 
Dermody, On the death of . 374 
Despair— a fragment . . . 262 
Disappointment, Ode on . . 37 
Eccentric Drama, Fragment of an 248 
Editor, Letter to an . . . 102 
Elegy on Death of Mr. Gill . . 72 
English poets, Remarks on . 416 
Epigram on Robert Bloomfield . 365 
Epitaphs: Cowper, On. (Hayley.) 460 

Eve of Death 264 

Family Worship, Hymn for . 356 
Fanny 1 upon thy breast I may 

not lie 362 

Fragment, " The western gale " , 260 

Fragments 366 

Friend in Distress, T© a . .350 
Fuseli, H., Ode to . . .319 



Genius— an ode .... 338 

— of Romance, Ode to the . 330 
Give me a cottage— a sonnet . 312 
Go, lovely rose !— a song . . 359 

— to the raging sea . . . 332 
Gondoline— a ballad . . . 295 
Grave of a Friend, Sonnet at the 345 
Harris, M., Letter to ... 73 
Harvest Moon, Ode to the . . 269 
Hayley's epitaph to Cowper . 460 
Heavens, On a survey of the . 304 

Hints, etc 205 

How awful! how impressive is 

this gloom .... 228 
Hushed is the lyre .... 370 
I am pleased and yet I'm sad . 360 
I've read, my friend, of Diocletian 254 
If far from me the fates remove 362 

— worth, if genius, to the world 

are dear . . . .214 
Immortality— " Athanatos " . 267 

James, Letter to his brother 117, 154 
Lady, thou weepest for maniac's 

woe 312 

Letters 57 

Lo! o'er the welkin the tempest- 
uous clouds .... 313 

— on the eastern summit . . 367 
Lofft, Capel, Letter to . . .144 

To — a sonnet . . . 344 

Loud rage the winds without . 371 
Lullaby, The, of a female convict 317 
Lyre, To my— an ode . . . 279 
Maddock, B., Letters to, 82, 85, 96, 105 

147, 158, 165, 170, 188, 199 
Melancholy Hours . . .425 
Midnight, Ode to . . . .336 
Misfortune, Sonnet to . . 345 
Mistress, At the grave of his . 306 
Monody by J. Blackett . . 230 
Moon, Ode to the— a fragment . 341 

— Sonnet to the .... 344 
Morning, To the .... 25 
Mother, Letters to his, 124, 132, 149 

164, 174, 187, 191 

— Sonnet to his .... 378 

Muse, To the 256 

Music 268 

— O give me 368 

My own character ... 32 

— study 308 

Nelsoni Mors .... 353 



White 
"WTiittier 



602 



Neville, Letters to his brother, 5?, 75 

87, 128, 133, 143, 160, 171, 182, 185 

190, 196, 204 

O give me Music .... 368 

— Lord, my God, in mercy turn . 358 

— lost too soon .... 224 

— pale art thou, my lamp . . 357 

— spirit of the blest! . . .233 

— thou most fatal of Pandora's 

train 343 

— Warton ! to thy soothing shell 255 
Ode on the late Henry Kirke 

White 218 

Once more and yet once more . 371 
Pastoral— "Come Anna" . .335 
Plumtre, J., Letter to . . . 172 
Prayer, A 206 

— Reflections on . . . . 483 
Primrose, To an early . . . 310 
Prose compositions . . . 410 
Quick o'er the wintry waste— a 

sonnet 379 

Recantatory— a sonnet . . . 315 
Recovery from Sickness, On . 40 
Reflection on death of H. K. 

White 228 

Reflections by William Holloway 22a 
Romance, Genius of, Ode to the 330 
Rosemary, To the herb . . .24 
Rough, Sergeant, Letters to 

104, 125, 141 
Savoyard's Return, The . . 331 
Sawest thou that light ? . . .366 
Shipwrecked Solitary's Song . 271 
Sister, Letter to his . . . 183 
Softly, softly blow the breezes . 257 
Solitude 361 

— On reading the poem on . 223 
Sonnets: iEolian Harp, On hear- 
ing an 

— Ah, once again the long-left 

wires 221 

— April, To 346 

— As thus oppressed with many 

a heavy care .... 346 

— Bard of brief days . . .214 

— Consumption, To . . .348 

— Give me & cottage . . .312 

— Grave of a friend, At the . . 345 

— Hail! gifted youth . . . 209 

— Hark! 'tis some sprite . .210 

— Henry, I greet thine entrance 209 
>- Lady, thou weepest . . .312 

— Lo ! o'er the welkin the tem- 

pestuous clouds . . .313 

— Lofft, unto thee . . .344 

— Master so early of the various 

lyre 211 

— Misfortune, To ... 345 

— Moon, To the . . . . 314 

— Mother, To his . . . . 378 

— Quick o'er the wintry waste . 379 



305 



Sonnets: Recantatory . . . 815 

— Sweet to the gay of heart . 378 

— Taper, To a .... 34V 

— Thy judgments, Lord, are just 349 

— 'Tis now the dead of night . 221 

— Too, too prophetic did thy wild 



225 
311 



313 
347 



note swell 

— Trent, River, To the 

— What art thou, Mighty One ! 

— When I sit musing . 

— Winter Traveler . 

— Ye unseen spirits . 

— Ye whose aspirings court the 

muse of lays . . . 314 

— Yes, fled already is thy vital 

fire 213 

— Yes, 'twill be over soon . . 348 
Star of Bethlehem . . . &57 
Sternhold and Hopkins . . . 412 
Summer's Eve, Description of a 324 
Swann, K., Letters to, 108, 112, 127, 131 
Sweet to the gay of heart— a son- 
net 378 

Taper, Sonnet to a . . 347 

Thanatos. (Death.) . . .266 
There was a little bird upon that 

pile 367 

Thompson, P., Letters to . 167, 180 
Thou base repiner at another's 

joy 

Thought, Ode to ... 
Thy gentle spirit now is fled 

— judgments, Lord, are just 

Time 

Tragedy, Remarks on . 
Trent, Sonnet to the River 
Tributary Verses .... 
Unhappy White! . 
Wandering Boy .... 
Warton, Remarks on . 
West, Mrs.. Letter to 
What is this world at best . 
When high romance o'er every 

wood 370 

— I sit musing on the checkered 

past 369 

— pride and envy . . . .372 
While in full choir the solemn re- 
quiem 2S6 

Whit-Monday, On 373 

White, Henry Kirk, Life of . .11 

Lines on Death of . .211 

Wind at midnight, To the . . 2C4 
Winter Traveler— a sonnet . 313 
Wonderful Juggler, The . . 376 
Ye gentlest gales! oh, hither waft 217 

— unseen spirits — a sonnet . . 347 

— whose aspirings court the muse 

of lays . . . . . .314 

Yes, once more that dying strain 358 

— 'twill be over soon— a son- 

net 



364 
337 
233 
349 
380 
419 
311 
209 
229 
259 
416 
175 
219 



White, Henry Kirke. Early primrose - Flo. 

■ Herb rosemary ------ Flo. 

Life of - White 

Lines on death of, by J. Plumtre - White 

White, Eev. Mr., his departure from parish Wil. 
— Sir Thomas, c. in Queen Mary - - - Ten. 



, 348 

63 
70 
11 

211 
85 

537 



603 



White 
Whittier 



White bud ! that in meek beauty - - - Flo. 

— chip hat Wil. 

— clouds, whose shadows haunt the deep - Whi. 

— czar, The Lon. 

— doe of Rylstone ------ Wor. 

— footed deer, The Bry. 

— lady of Avenel Scott 

— lady to Mary Avenel ----- Scott 

— lady's farewell - Scott 

— ship, The Eos. 

— - swan of cities, slumbering in thy nest - Lon. 

— wonder of dear Juliet's hand - - - Sha. 
Whitefoord, John, Letter to - - - - Burns 
Whither? Lon. 

— Albeit I follow fast Low. 

— away, delight? • Her. 

— away, thou little careless rover? - - Ing. 

— away, whither away? ----- Ten. 

— is sailing the ship? Sch. 

— 'midst falling dew ------ Bry. 

— O whither art thou fled - Her. 

— O whither, love, shall we go - - - Ten. 

— shall a creature run ----- Wes. 

— thou turbid wave? Lon. 



— was it that my spirit wended - 
Whitman, Mrs. Still day in autumn 

To a withered rose 

Whitmore, Lady, Epitaph on - 

— Walter, c. in Henry vi., pt. 2 - 
Whitmonday, On 

Whitney, Mrs. A. D. T. Larvae - 
Whitsunday 

— For 

Whittier, Elizabeth H., Poems by - 



Sch. 

- Flo. 
Flo. 

- Dry. 
Sha. 

White 
Fav. 

- Her. 
Wes. 

- Whi. 



WHITTIER, JOHN GREENLEAF, Poems of: 



A. K., To 151 

Abraham Davenport . . . 812 
Accompanying MSS. to a friend . 129 
Adams, John Quincy. (E. H. W.) 396 

After Election 851 

Agassiz, Louis, Prayer of . . 383 
Agricultural Exhibition . . . 249 

All's Well 151 

Among the Hills . . . .325 

Amy Wentworth .... 273 

Andrew Rykman's Prayer . . 281 
Angel of Patience, The . . 96 
Angels of Buena Vista, The . . 119 
Anniversary Celebration, For an 55 
— Hymn ...... 267 

Answer, The ... 337 
Antislavery Society, For a meet- 
ing of 54 

April 167 

Argyle, Dream of . (E. H. W.) . 394 
Astreea 165 



73 

186 
183 
379 
334 

208 
424 
427 
428 
192 
381 
728 
392 

22 
390 
253 
436 
475 
222 

2G 
262 
387 
223 

22 
230 
479 
329 
317 
496 
373 
440 
142 

67 
394 



Astraea at the Capitol • . 265 

At Eventide 416 

Atlanta, Howard at . 353 

Attitash, Maids of . . . .305 
Autumn Festival, For an . . 260 

— Thoughts 144 

Avery, Parson, Swan-song of . 229 
Ballads .... 202,218,270 
Barbara Frietchie ... 269 
Barbour, Burial of . . . .211 
Barclay of Ury .... 121 
Barefoot Boy, The . . . .195 
Barnard, F. A. P., To . . . 341 
Bartlett, William Francis . . 411 
Battle Autumn of 1862, The . 265 

Benedicite 163 

Bethlehem, Star of ... 87 
Book of a Friend, In the . . 71 
Bradley, Conductor ... 390 
Branded Hand, The ... 65 
Brazil, Freedom in ... 838 



Whittier 



604 



Bremer, Fredrika, To . 
Brewing of Soma, The 
Bridal of Permacook, The 
British Emancipation, For anni 

versary of 
Brother of Mercy, The 
Brown of Ossawatomie . 
Brussels, Peace Convention at . 
Bryant, W. C, on his Birthday 
Buena Vista, Angels of 
Burial of Barbour . 
Burns. Robert .... 

For Centenary of . 

C, G. B., To .... 

C, S.. To 

Calef in Boston , 

Call of the Christian 
Cape Ann, Garrison of 
Capital Punishment 
Cassandra Southwick 
Centennial Hymn . 
Ceylon, Cypress-tree of 

Chalkley Hall 

Changeling. The .... 
Channing. William Ellery 
Chapel of the Hermits 
Charity. (E. H. W.) 
Charter-breakers, Curse of the 

Chicago 

Child, Lydia Maria, To 

— Songs 

Children's Mission. Hymn for . 
Christian Slave, The 

— Tourists. The .... 
Christmas Carmen, A . . . 

— Hymn at St. Helena's Island 
Cities of the Plain, The . 
Clear Vision. The 

Clerical Friend, From a letter to a 

— Oppressors 
Cobbler Keezar's Vision 
Common Question, The 
Conductor Bradley 
Congress, To the Thirty-ninth . 
Conquest of Finland, The 
Corn-song. The .... 

Countess, The 

Crisis, The 

Cross. The 

Crucifixion, The .... 
Cry of a Lost Soul .... 
Cuba. Dr. Kane in. (E. H. W.) 
Curse of the Charter-breakers 
Cypress-tree of Ceylon 
Davenport, Abraham . 

Dead Ship of Harpswell, The . 
Death, Night and. (E. H. W.) . 
Dedication to Songs of Labor . 

Delaware, To 

Democracy 

Demon of the Study, The 

Derne 

Dillingham, Richard, On death of 
Disarmament .... 
Divine Compassion 
Dole of Jarl Thorkell. The 
Double-headed Snake of New- 
bury, The .... 
Dream of Argyle. The. (E. H. W.) 

— of Pio Nono. The . 

— of Summer, A . 



167 

373 

15 

55 
303 
258 
149 
323 
119 
211 
186 
247 
248 
199 
144 
92 
221 
101 
28 
409 
108 
107 
304 
132 
153 
398 
76 
372 
353 
391 
415 
50 
147 
393 
285 
86 
331 
70 
49 
270 
322 
390 
317 
213 
117 
275 
79 
166 
86 



Drovers, The .... 114 
Dunkers, Hymn of the . . . 407 
Eagle's quill from Lake Superior 141 
Echard, Vision of . . . .399 
Ein Feste Burg ist Unser Gott . 262 
El Ghor, " The Rock "in . .244 
] Election, Eve of . . . .236 
Elliot, Ebenezer . . . .146 
Elsie, King Volmer and . . 377 
Emancipation Celebration, Hymn 



357 

57 

97 

264 

318 

161 

166 

236 

416 

37 



67 

56 

90 

213 

172 

215 

115 

196 

339 

96 

121 

187 



76 

108! 
312 
309 
397| 
112 
123 
105 I 
124 
164 1 
166 
374 



for 

— Convention of 1840 . 
England, To the Reformers of 
Englishmen, To 
Eternal Goodness, The 
Europe, Peace of . 

Eva 

Eve of Election, The 
Eventide. At 

Exiles. The .... 
Ezekiel xxxiii. 30-33 . 

F.;J. T.,To 245 

Familist's Hvmn, The . . 35 

Faneuil Hall, To . 

Farewell. The 

Female Martyr, The 

Finland, Conquest of 

First-day Thoughts 

— Flowers, The . 
Fishermen, The 
Flowers in "Winter 
Fly-leaf, Lines on a 
Follen .... 

I Forgiveness— a sonnet 

I Forster, William . 

I Fountain. The . 

1 Franconia from the Pemigewasset 278 
Franklin. Lady. (E. H. W.) . . 396 

i Freedom in Brazil . . . 338 
Fremont, John C, To . . .263 
Friend, To a, on death of his sister 138 

— To a, on return from Europe . 95 
Friend's Burial, The ... 384 
Frietchie, Barbara . 
Frost Spirit. The . 
Fruit-gift. The 
Fugitive Slave Act, On the 
Funeral-Tree of the Sokokis 
G. B. C, To . 

G. L. S 

G., W. L., To 

Gallows, Abolition of the 

Garibaldi, Giuseppe . 

Garrison of Cape Ann, The 

Garvin, Mary 

Georgetown house of worship, For 340 

Gettysburg, Hive at . . .333 

Gift of Tritemius, The . . .235 

Giving and Taking . . .415 

Golden Wedding of Longwood, 

The 391 

Gone 139 

Grave by the Lake, The 

Hail to Posterity 

Halleck, Fitz-Greene . 

Hampton Beach 

Harpswell, Dead Ship of . 

Haschish, The 

Haverhill Library, Opening of 

Hazel Blossoms 

Healer, The .... 



91 

. 198 

198 
. 31 

248 

. 338 

47 

. 100 

350 
. 221 

202 



359 
410 
127 
309 
201 
412 
380 



605 



Whittier 



Henchman, The 


. 412 


Hermit of the Thebaid, The 


185 


Hero, The .... 


DM 


Hill-top, The .... 


140 


Hive at Gettysburg, The 


. 352 


Holy Land, The. (From Lamar- 


tine.) .... 


. HI 


Home Ballads .... 


218 


Hooper, Lucy .... 


. 131 


Howard at Atlanta 


353 


Human Sacrifice, The . 


. 102 


Hunters of Men, The . 


48 


Huskers, The .... 


116 


Hymn for Emancipation Celebra 


- 


tion 


. 357 


— for Georgetown church 


340 


— for Thomas Starr King 


. 323 


— of the Dunkers 


407 




. 285 


Hymns from the French of La 




martine .... 


. 88 


" I was a stranger " . 


415 


Ichabod! 


. 146 


In Quest 


887 


Indian Women, Song of 


. 25 


Inscribed to friends under arrest 


200 


Invocation .... 


. 166 


Italy 


2F3 


J. P., To 


. 108 


J. T. F., To 


245 


Jarl Thorkell, Dole of . 


. 332 


John Underhill .... 


385 


June on the Merrimack . 


. 406 


K, A., To 


150 






Kane, Dr., in Cuba. (E. H. W.) 


396 


Kansas Emigrants, The 


200 


Kathleen 


171 


Kenoza Lake .... 


24S 


King Solomon and the Ants 
— Thomas Starr— a hymn . 


413 


323 


— Volmer and Elsie . 


377 


Kinsman 


392 


•Knight of St. John, The . 


81 


Kossuth, Louis .... 


172 


Labor. Songs of . 


112 


Ladv Franklin. (E. H. W.) . 




Lake-side. The .... 


139 


Lamartine, Hymns from the 
French of . 




88 






Last Walk in Autumn, The 


20K 


Later poems .... 


208 


" Laurels, The "—Twentieth anni- 




versary .... 


356 


LausDeo! 


316 


Lay of Old Time, A 


214 


Legend of Saint Mark, The 


142 


Legendary Poems .... 


afi 


Leggett s Monument — a sonnet 


111 


Lexington, 1775 .... 


409 


Librarv, The .... 


412 


Loch Maree, Well of .. 


143 


Longwood. Golden Wedding of 




L'Ouverture. Toussaint . 


41 


Lucknow, Pipes at 


241 


Luther's Hymn .... 


262 


Lyrics 231 


314 


Maids of Attitash, The . 


3D5 


Manoah, Wife of, to her husband 


85 


Mantle of St. John de Matha. The 


314 



Marais du Cygne, Le . . .243 

Marguerite 376 

Martinique, Slaves of . . . 77 
Massachusetts, To . . . .67 

— " Our State " . . . .150 

— to Virginia 62 

MaudMuller .... 204 
Mayflowers, The . . . .211 
Meeting, The .... 334 

— Waters, The. (E. H. W.) . . 397 

Memorial, A 284 

Memories 141 

Memory, A 199 

Men of Old, The . . . .148 
Merrimack, The ... 26, 280 

— June on the .... 406 
Mexico, On the Treaty with . 79 

Miriam 341 

Mithridates at Chios . . .266 

Mogg Megone 1 

Moloch in State Street . .160 
Monadnock from Wachuset . . 279 
Moral Welfare, The ... 57 
Mosses, On Receiving a basket of 151 
Mountain Pictures. Parts 1 and 2 278 

Muller, Maud 204 

My Birthday .... 372 

— Dream 195 

— Namesake . . . 215 

— Old Schoolmaster, To . . 173 

— Playmate 233 

— Psalm 242 

— Soul and I .... 92 

— Triumph 351 

Mystery, A 389 

Naples 277 

National Lyrics .... 314 
Nauhaught, the Deacon . . 348 
Neall, Daniel .... 137 
" New England Legend," Extract 

from 127 

— Exodus, The . . . .201 

— Hampshire .... 59 

— Wife and the Old, The . . 40 

— Year, The .... 60 
Newbiirv. Double-headed Snake of 228 
Night and Death. (E. H. W.) . 397 

Norembega 347 

Norsemen, The .... 27 
Occasional Poems . . . 277, 318 
Old Burying-ground, The . . 240 

— South," In the . . . .408 
Ossawatomie, Brown of . . 258 
Our Master 319 

— River. (Merrimack.) .. . 280 

— State. (Massachusetts.) ' . .150 
Over-heart, The .... 237 

Overruled 414 

P., J., To 108 

Paean 73 

Pageant, The . . . .369 

Palatine, The 310 

Palestine 82 

Palm-tree, The . . . .246 
Panorama, The .... 175 
Pass of the Sierra, The . . .212 
Pastoral Letter, The ... 53 
Pastorius, Francis Daniel . 358 

Peace Autumn, The . . . 317 

— Convention at Brussels . . 149 

— In .... 162 



Whittier 
"WTio 



606 



Peace of Europe . . . .161 
Pennacook, Bridal of . . . 15 
Pennsylvania Pilgrim, The . . 358 

— To 212 

Pentucket 31 

Perugia, From .... 258 

Pictures 163 

Pinckney's Resolutions, Adoption 

of 75 

Pine-tree, The .... 68 
Pio Nono, Dream of 18U 

Pipes at Lucknow, The . . 241 
Piscataqua, Truce of 231 

Pius Ninth, To . . . .145 
Plymouth Church, St. Paul, For 

opening of . . . . 394 
Poor Voter on Election Day . . 170 
Port Royal, At . . . .268 
Prayer-book, On a . . . . 244 

— of Agassiz, The ... 383 

Preacher, The 249 

Prelude to "Among the Hills " 325 

— to " Pennsylvania Pilgrim " . 359 
Pressed Gentian, The . . .414 
Prisoner for Debt, The ... 99 
Prisoners of Naples, The . . 159 

Problem, The 417 

Proclamation, The . . .266 
Prophecy of Samuel Sewell, The 223 
Public Occasions, Poems for . 355 

Pumpkin, The 126 

Quaker Alumni, The . . . 254 

— of the Olden Time, The . . 98 

guestions of Life . . . 157 
andolph of Roanoke . . .104 

Ranger, The 206 

Rantoul, Robert . . . .188 

Raphael 130 

Red Riding-hood . . . .413 

— River Voyageur, The . . 247 
Reformer, The . . . .98 
Reformers of England, To the . 97 

Relic, The 64 

Remembrance . . . .170 
Rendition, The . . . .197 

Response 417 

Revisited 321 

Reward, The .... 130 
Ritner, Gov., On reading message 

of 52 

River Path, The .... 284 
Rivermouth, Wreck of .297 

Robin, The 375 

"Rock, The," in El Ghor . . 244 

Ronge, To 106 

Rykman's, Andrew, Prayer . 281 

S., C, To 199 

S., G. L 338 

Sabbath Scene, A . . . .168 
Saint Helena's Island, Hymn at 285 

— John 32 

Knight of .... 81 

de Matha, Mantle of . . 314 

— Mark, Legend of . . .142 

— Paul, For opening of church in 394 
School-close, At . . . .416 

— days, In 350 

Sea-dream, A .... 388 
Seed-time and Harvest . . .151 
Seeking of the Water-fall, The 404 
Sewall, Samuel E., To, of Melrose 261 



Sewall, Samuel E., Prophecy or 223 
Shadow and the Light, The . . 234 
Ship-builders, The . . .112 
Shipley, Thomas . . . .74 
Shoemakers, The . . .113 
Sierra, Pass of the .... 212 

Singer, The 371 

Sister, To my 144 

Sisters, The 375 

— The. A picture by Barry . 249 
Skipper Ireson's Ride ... 225 
Slave-ships, The .... 43 
Slavery, Stanzas on ... 45 
Slaves of Martinique . . .77 

— Song of, in the Desert . . 200 
Snow-bound. A winter idyl . 286 
Sokokis, Funeral tree of tne . 31 
Solomon and the Ants . . . 413 
Soma, Brewing of 373 
Song of Indian Women . . 25 

— of Slaves in the Desert . . 200 

— of the Free 47 

— of the Negro Boatmen . . 269 
Songs of Labor .... 112 
Sonnets: Forgiveness . . 121 

— Leggett's Monument . . .111 
Southern Statesman, To a . 74 
Southwick, Cassandra . . .28 
Spiritual Manifestation, A . 355 
Stanzas for the Times . . 51, 168 
Star of Bethlehem, The . . 87 
Storrs, Charles B., To memory of 133 
Sturge, Joseph, In remembrance 

of 238 

On Departure of. (E. H. W.) 395 

Suggested by reading a State pa- 
per 192 

Summer by the Lakeside . . 183 

— Day's Excursion, After a . 162 
Summons, The .... 273 
Sumner, Charles .... 381 
Sunset on the Bear-camp . . 404 
Supernaturalism of New England, 

With copy of . . .144 

Swan Song of Parson Avery, The 229 
Sycamores, The . . . .227 
Tauler, John .... 190 
Telling the Bees . . . .226 
Tent on the Beach ... 294 
Texas— Voice of New England . 66 
Thebaid, Hermit of the . . 185 
Thiers, Louis Adolphe . . . 410 

Three Bells 379 

Thy Will be Done . . . .261 
Torrey, S. O., On the Death of . 134 
Toussaint L'Ouverture . . .41 
Trailing Arbutus, The . . 211 

Trinitas 239 

Tritemius, Gift of ... 235 
Truce of Piscataqua, The . . 231 

Trust 170 

Two Angels, The . . . .411 

— Rabbis, The .... 333 
Underhill, John . . . . 385 
Ury, Barclay of . . . .121 
Varnishers, The . . . .321 
Vaudois Teacher, The . . 91 
Vesta ... . 392 
Virginia Slave-mother's farewell 56 
Vision of Echard, The . . .399 
Voice of New England. (Texas.) 66 



607 



Whittier 
"Who 



Voices, The . 

— of Freedom 
W. L. G., To . 

Waiting, The 

"War Time, Poems in 

Washington City, On a visit to 

Watchers. The 

Wedding Veil, The. (E. H. W.) 

Well of Loch Maree, The 

Wenham. Witch of 

Wentworth. Amy . 

What of the Day? 

— the Birds said 

— the Voice said . 
Wheeler, Daniel 
Whittier, Elizabeth H., Poems 

by 



192 
41 

47 
278 
261 



143 

401 
2?3 

•214 
315 
122 

136 



Wife of Manoah to her husband 85 
Winter, Christian, From the Dan- 
ish 377 

Wish of To-dav. The ... 150 
Witch of Wenham. The . . 401 

Witch"s Daughter, The . . 218 

Woman, A 374 

Woolman's Journal, With a copy 

of . .... 109 

Word for the Hour. A . . 261 
Wordsworth. William . . . 162 
World's Emancipation Convention 57 



Worship 
Wreck of Rivermouth. The 
Wright. Silas. On the Death of 
Yankee Girl, The 
Yorktown .... 



123 
297 
128 
46 
70 



Whittier, John G. Maud Muller - - - Fav. 240 

River path, The Fav. 316 

Sonnet to - Lon. 382 

Who are the nobles of the earth - - - Fav. 76 

— art my life and light, my king, my world ! L. of A. 67 

— builds a church to God ----- Pope 250 

— but hails the sight with pleasure - - Wor. 150 

— but in sorrow know how much they love - Pog. 197 

— but must laugh, if such a man - - - Pope 270 

— can hold a fire in his hand - Sha. 361 

— can be wise, amazed, temperate - - Sha. 795 

— claims our Shakespeare from that realm - Hoi. 270 

— comes with rapture greeted, and caressed Wor. 372 

— cometh over the hills - Low. 407 

— dared to love their country and be poor - Pope 376 

— does f the wars mora than - - - - Sha. 924 

— doth ambition shun ----- Sha. 213 

— doth right deeds is twice born - L. of A. 101 

— e'en in words unfettered, might at full - Dante 95 

— ever gave more honorable prize - - - Spe. 28 

— ever saw a noble sight . - - Dry. 552 

— fears to die ?------- Ten. 473 

— finds not Providence all good and wise - Pope 192 

— first beholds those everlasting clouds - - Rog. 26 

— for their unborn children care - - - Wes. 261 

— gave thee, oh, beauty Erne. 81 

— gives and hides the giving hand - - Whi. 415 

— has not heard of the vale of Cashmere Moore 461 

— hath not been a poet? ... - Low. 342 

— in the painting art excel ... - Wes. 278 

— in thy word confide Wes. 353 

— is here so base that would be a - - - Sha. 777 

— is it that says most? — a sonnet - - - Sha. 1038 

— is Sylvia i what is she Sha, 35 

— is the angel that cometh? - - - - Pro. 247 

— is the bard of the Iliad among you? - - Sch. 268 

— is the happiest of men? - - Goe. 274 



$& 608 

Who is the happy warrior? - - - - Wor. 422 

— is the honest man? Her. 157 

— is the maid? ---.-'.-."- Moore 340 

— is the maid with golden hair - - - Moore 190 

— is the shepherd sent to lead - Hoi. 144 

— is this tender-hearted friend - - - Wes. 299 

— knows this or that? ----- Erne. 314 

— looking backward from his manhood's prime Whi. 130 

— mid the grasses of the field -■'--'- Bry. 315 

— mounts will fall, who falls may mount L. of A. 147 

— moves so stately on Lumon - Oss. 275 

— ne'er knew joy but friendship might divide Pope 343 

— never eat with tears his bread - - - ~ Goe. 407 

— never mentions hell to ears polite - - Pope 258 

— of all statesmen is his country's pride - Hoi. 120 

— overcomes by force hath overcome but half Mil. 31 

— pants for glory finds but short repose - Pope 307 

— pipes upon the long green hill - - - Ing. 506 

— ponders national events— a sonnet - - Wor. 439 

— rashly strove thy image to portray? - - Wor. 438 

— read a chapter when they rise - - - Her. 185 

— rides there so late through the night - - Goe. 106 

— rises on the banks of Seine - - - Wor. 275 

— rules these lands ? the pilgrim said - - Ros. 35 

— saw the hid beginnings - Erne. 304 

— saw this hussy when she came? - - - Hoi. 92 

— says in verse what others say in prose - Pope 304 

— says that fictions only and false hair - Her. 139 

— seeks a noble end, not angels - - - Erne. 288 

— sees with equal eye, as God of all - - Pope 189 

— swerves from innocence — a sonnet - - Wor. 333 

— shall decide when doctors disagree - - Pope 240 

— shrinks not from alliance - Wor. 325 

— stands on that cliff, like a figure of stone - Whi. 1 

— steals my purse steals trash - - - Sha. 894 

— that trusted in the Lord - - • - Wes. 30 

— toiled a slave may come anew a prince L. of A. 147 

— track the steps of glory to the grave - Byron 276 

— trusts in God fears not - Goe. 256 

— vaileth love should first have vanquished - Ing. 466 

— will believe my verse in time to come - Sha. 1030 

— will hear me? - - - - - - - Goe. 193 

— will not mercie unto others show - - Spe. 435 

— wooed in haste and means to wed - - Sha. 241 

— would be a mermaid fair - Ten. 22 

— would be a merman bold .... <Ten. 21 

— would have thought a thing so slight - Flo. 499 
Whoe'er has gone through London street - Hood 568 

— he be that sojourns here - - - - Burns 179 

— thou art, approach and with a sigh - - Rog. 250 



609 



Who 
Why 



Whoe'er thou art, O reader, know - - Burns 185 

— thou art, these lines now reading - Burns 105 
Whoever hath her wish, thou hast thy ' ' Will " Sha. 1044 

— thinks a faultless piece to see - - - Pope 47 
Wholl buy gods of love — a song - - - Goe. 34 

— buy niy love-knots ? ----- Moore 531 
Wholly wrapt from self in keen unraveling L. of A. 81 
Whom do we crown with the laurel-leaf - Flo. 153 

— first we love, you know, we seldom wed - Mer. 463 

— hath he chosen for his priests - - - P. of F. 63 

— the untaught shepherds call - - - Col. 29 

— will you send to London town - - - Burns 279 
Whose beauty was so rich to see - P. of F. 61 

— is that noble, dauntless brow? - - - Burns 103 

— is the love that, gleaming through the world She. 31 

— music is the gladness of the world - - Eliot 140 

— sad inhabitants each year would come - Flo. 182 

— sore task does not divide the Sunday - Sha. 812 

— words all ears took captive - Sha. 277 
Whoso hath in the lap of soft delight - - Spe. 585 

— will seek, by right deserts t' attain - - Spe. 603 
Why all the souls that were - - - - Sha. 74 

— am I loth to leave this earthly scene? Burns 37 

— are taste and genius so seldom - - - Sch. 257 

— art thou silent? — a sonnet - Wor. 246 

— cast ye back upon the Gallic shore - - Wor. 305 

— did you melt your waxen man - - - Eos. 83 

— didst thou promise such a beauteous day Sha. 1032 

— do I languish thus drooping and dull - - Her. 207 

— do I o'er my paper once more bend - - Goe. 217 

— do I weep? To leave the vine Hem. 156; Fav. 284 

— do the Gentiles tumult - Mil. 483 

— do ye weep, sweet babes? - - - - Flo. 66 

— do you look sad, my Minnie? - - - Pro. 432 

— does azure deck the sky ? Moore 98 

— don't you speak for yourself, John? " - Lon. 197 

— dost thou wildly rush ----- Lon. 405 

— I will see thee at Philippi, then - - Sha. 783 

— is a pump like V O- — ? - - - Moore 327 

— is it said thou canst not live - - - She. 566 

— is my heart so dark and void - - - Wes. 294 

— is my verse so barren of new pride - - Sha. 1037 

— is the Spanish maiden's grave - Hem. 463 

— let the stingless critic chide - Moore 70 

— lingers my gaze where the last hues of day Hem. 247 

— look the distant mountains . - - Ayt. 200 

— minstrel these untuneful murmurings - Wor. 228 

— need I say, Louisa, dear ! - - - Col. 162 

— nothing comes amiss so money comes withal Sha. 234 

— pacest thou, mv neighbor fair - - - Goe. 80 

39 



W 610 

Why, Pigot, complain of this damsel's disdain Byron 156 

— run the crowd? what means the throng - Sch. 166 

— seeks the knight that rocky cape - - Hoi. 90 

— should a living man complain . - - Wes. 249 

— should a man whose blood - Sha. 182 

— should a mortal man complain - - Wes. 235 

— should I keep holiday ----- Erne. 77 

— should my anxious breast repine - - Byron 169 

— should my tears forever flow ? Wes. 154 

— should the enthusiast — a sonnet - , - Wor. 397 

— should'st thou fear the beautiful angel - Pro. 84 

— sitt'st thou by that ruined hall - - - Scott 402 

— sleeps the future as a snake enrolled - Wor. 381 

— stand we gazing on the sparkling brine - Wor. 402 

— teach that love is naught - - - - Sch. 53 

— then, the world's mine oyster - - - Sha. 49 

— these inquiries make, where charity may flow Goe. 369 

— this flower is now called so - - - . - Flo. 86 

— tremblest thou, aspen, no storm - - Flo. 184 

— urge the long, unequal fight - - - Whi. 192 

— weep ye by the tide, ladie - Scott 400 

— weeps the muse for England? - - - Cow. 149 

— why tell thy lover Burns 284 

— will ye die? - - Wes. 209 

— William, on that old gray stone - - Wor. 412 

— wilt thou cast the roses from thine hair - Eos. 157 

— wilt thou make bright music - - - Pro. 105 

— wouldst thou leave me, O gentle child? - Hem. 408 

— ye tenants of the lake - Burns 110 
Wi' braw new branks, in mickle pride - Burns 94 
Wickerd, c. in House of Aspen - Scott 562 
Wicliffe. See Wycliffe. 

Widow of Crescentius Hem. 97 

— of Florence, c. in All's Well that Ends Well Sha. 254 

— of G-lencoe - - Ayt. 87 

— ofNain Wil. 46 

— on Windemere side, The - Wor. 129 

— The Hood 575 

Widows, For Wes. 125 

— tale, The - - Cra. 70 

Wieland, Klopstock and .... Sch. 303 

Wife of Asdrubal, The .... Hem. 110 

— of Bath, The ------ Dry. 417 

— of Bath, The, her prologue - - - - Pope 485 

— of Manoah to her husband - - - Whi. 85 
Wife's appeal, The Wil. 260 

— tragedy, The Mer. 424 

Wilberf orce, Wm. , Sonnet to - - - - Cow. 488 
Wilbur, Homer, pseud, of James Eussell Lowell. 

Wild bird, that wingest wide the glimmering Mer. 462 



611 $!iL 

Wild blossoms of the moorland - - - Flo. 171 

— duck's nest, The — a sonnet - • - - - Wor. 229 

— flowers Flo. 156 

— gallant, The " — an epilogue - Dry. 512 

— gazelle, The Byron 191 

— huntsman, The - - - Hem. 140; Scott 359 

— pale, and wonder-stricken - - - She. 472 

— redbreast ! hadst thou at Jemima's lip - Wor. 243 

— rose, sweet-brier, eglantine - - - Flo. 477 

— was the day ; the wintry sea - - * Bry. 129 
Wildly and mournfully the Indian drum - Hem. 190 

— round our woodland quarters - - - Whi. 118 
Wilds horrid and dark with o'ershadowing Cow. 645 
Wilfred, c. in The Borderers - Wor. 43 
Wilhelm Meister's apprenticeship, From - Goe. 405 
Will --------- Ten. 252 

— a meek, modest man of God - - - Wes. 247 

— are you sitting and watching there yet? - Mer. 473 

— ever the dear days come back again? - Lon. 412 

— I comet" That is pleasant - Hoi. 223 

— she come to me, little Eflie - - - Pro. 294 

— then, Duperrier, thy sorrow be eternal? - Lon. 338 

— Waterproof's lyrical monologue - - Ten. 108 

— ye also go away? ------ Wes. 338 

— ye go to the coals in the morning? - - Burns 329 

— ye go to the Ewebrights," Eemarks on Burns 313 

— ye go to the Indies, my Mary? — a song - Burns 200 
William, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

— c. in House of Aspen Scott 562 

— and Helen— a ballad Scott 355 

— c. in As You Like It Sha. 205 

— Malet, c. in Harold - - - - - Ten. 615 

— Eufus, c. in Harold Ten. 615 

— of Normandy, c. in Harold - Ten. 615 

— Tell, Songs from --.._. Sch. 341 

— the Third— a sonnet - -Wor. 373 

— was once a bashful youth - Cow. 26 
Williams, c. in Henry v. Sha. 439 

— c. in Auchindrane ----'■- Scott 494 

— Bishop, c. in Charles the First - - - She. 491 

— Edward, To ------ She. 440 

Williams, Miss, Letters to Burns 393, 438 

Williams of Thame, Lord, c. in Queen Mary Ten. 537 

Willie Chambers Burns 94 

— Wastle dwalt on Tweed - - - Burns 240 
Willing to wound and yet afraid to strike - Pope 270 
WILLIS, NATHANIEL PARKER, Poems of: 

Abraham, Sacrifice of . . .12 Alchemist, Dying . . . .211 

Absalom 28 Andre's Request to Wash:' igton 234 

Acrostic-sonnet. (Emilie Mar- Annoyer, The 281 

shall.) 291 Apennines, To my Mother from the 63 



Willis 
Winter 



612 



Apology, An < 

Baptism of Christ 

— On Witnessing a . . . • . 
Beautiful bov at Play . 

Belfry Pigeon. The .... 
Better moments .... 
Birthday verses .... 
Brown University, Poem at 
Burial of Champion of his Class . 
Chamber Scene .... 
Child tired of Play. On a 
Child's Impression of a Star 
Christ, Baptism of . 
Christ's entrance into Jerusalem 
City Pigeon, To a . 

— Poems 

College Poems 

Confessional, The 
Contemplation 

David's grief for his Child . 

Dawn 

Death of a Missionary 

— of a Young Girl .... 

— of Edward Payson . 

— of William Henry Harrison 
Declaration, The .... 
Dedication Hymn .... 
Dying Alchemist. The 

Elms of New Haven 

Ermengarde, To . 

Europe. On leaving 

Face beloved. To a 

Fail me not thou .... 

Fleetly hath passed the year 

Florence Gray 

Gethsemane. Scenes in 
Girl leading a blind mother . 
Glenmarv, Reverie at . 
Grave of "a Child, On the 
Gray. Florence .... 
Hagar in the Wilderness 
Harrison, William Henry, Death of 
Healing of Daughter of Jairus . 
Helen in a Huff .... 

Hero 

Idleness 

Ivon, Lord, and his Daughter . 
Jairus, Healing of Daughter of . 
Jephthah's Daughter . 
Jerusalem, Christ's entrance into 
Lady in the Chemisette 

— in the white dress 

— Jane — a humorous novel 



81 



Laura W— , To (two years old) . 
Lazarus and Mary 

Leper. The 

Love in a Cottage 

31 , To. from abroad . 

Marshall. Emilie. Acrostic sonnet 

on 

Mary, Lazarus and .... 

May 

Melanie 

Mother to her child 

— To my. from the Apennines 
Nain. Widow of . 

New Haven, Elms of 

Parrhasius 

Payson, Edward. Death of . 
Pity of the Park Fountain . 

Psyche 

Religious poems .... 
Revenue at Glenmary . 
Rizpah with her Sons . 
Roaring Brook .... 
Sabbath, The .... 
Sacrifice of Abraham 
Saturday afternoon . 
Scenes in Gethsemane . 
Scholar of Thebet ben Khorat . 
Scriptural poems .... 
She was not there 
Shunammite, The .... 
Soldier's Widow, The . 
Solitary. The ... 
Sonnets: Acrostic-sonnet on Em- 
ilie Marshall .... 

— Storm had been on the hills . 
Spirit-whispers .... 
Stanhope, Mrs., On portrait of . 

Starlight. 

Stolen Ring. To a . 

Sunrise Thoughts after a Ball 
Thebet ben Khorat. Scholar of . 

Thirty-five 

Thought over the Cradle . 
To her who has hopes of me 
Torn Hat, The 

True Incident 

Unseen Spirits .... 

White Chip Hat . 

White. Rev. Mr., his departure 

Widow of Nain .... 

Wife's Appeal, The .... 

Winter is come again . 

You know if it was you . 



274 

291 

54 

292 

217 

64 

63 

46 

104 

195 

298 

258 

306 

63 

94 

32 



12 

93 
61 

201 
7 

271 
15 



291 
287 
310 
322 
290 
268 
279 
201 
65 
77 
270 



186 
85 
46 
260 
304 
191 



Willis. Nathaniel Parker. Dying Alchemist, The Fav. 



Healing of Jairus* daughter 
-May - - ' - 

New Year, The 

Pity of park fountain 

Unseen spirits 

Willoughby, Lord, c. in Richard ii. 
Willow, Drooping. (Landon.) 

— The. (Byron.) 

— The. (Shakespeare.) - 

— tree, To a. (Herrick.) - 

— Wearing the. (Percy.) 



Fav. 

Flo. 
Fav. 
Fav. 
Fav. 
Sha. 

Flo. 

Flo. 

Flo. 

Flo. 

Flo. 



153 
113 
537 
37 
192 
252 
356 
145 
141 
143 
144 
142 



£-« « "Willis 

n1 ^ "Winter 

Willow wood— four sonnets - Ros. 251 

Wilmot, John, Imitation of - Pope 446 

Wilna, Four princesses at Lon. 384 

Wilson. Sad primrose ----- Flo. 64 

— John, the printer, Epitaph on - - - Burns 185 
Wilt not lay thee down in quiet slumber? - Ayt. 169 

— thou as such the cowards own - - - Wes. 298 

— thou be my dearie — a song - - - Burns 260 

— thou forget the happy hours - - - She. 411 

— thou not the lambkins guard - - - Sch. 115 

— thou seal up the avenues of ill - - - Erne. 238 
■ — thou suddenly enshroud thee - - - Goe. 72 
Wiltshire, Sheriff of, c. in Richard hi. - Sha. 556 
Winchelsea, Countess of. Nocturnal reverie Flo. 493 

Petition for an absolute retreat - - Flo. 390 

Winchelsea, Lady T - ----- Pope 376 

Winchester, Bishop of (Henry Beaufort), c. 

in Henry vi. , pt. 1 - - - - - Sha. 469 

(Gardiner), c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 

Death of. (Milton.) ----- Cow. 558 

Winchester, marquis of, On monument of - Dry. 320 

— marchioness of, Epitaph on - - - - Mil. 416 
Wind and stream. The Bry. 235 

— at midnight, To the - - - - White 264 

— clouds and star drifts - Hoi. 188 

— harp, The - Low. 351 

— over the chimney, The ... - Lon. 320 

— The - - - Pro. 315 

Winding up days with toil - Sha. 457 

Windmill, The ------- Lon. 400 

Window, The ; or, Songs of the wrens - - Ten. 489 

Windows, The - Her. 151 

Winds are loud and you are dumb - - Ten. 491 

— The - Bry. 188 

Windsor forest Pope 96 

Lines to Pope 381 

Windy side o' the law Sha. 295 

Wine of Circe, The — a sonnet for - - - Ros. 155 

— of Cyprus - - Bro. 101 

— of Jurancon - Lon. 412 

— of life is drawn, and the mere lees - - Sha. 795 
Winged hours — a sonnet ----- Ros. 239 
Wings have we — and as far as we can go - Wor. 419 

— of the dove, The Hem. 368 

Winnie and Minnie Ten. 684 

Winstanley - - Ing. 402 

Winter, Christian, From the Danish of - Whi. 377 

Winter, William. Through the darkness - Fav. 297 

Winter - Burns 35 ; Pope 37 ; Ros. 299 

Winter. (Southey.) Flo. 286; Ten. 490; Tho. 150 



Winter 01 a 

With t>14 

Winter and spring Mer. 458 

— and Timur ~ . - Goe. 371 

— evening hymn to my fire - Low. 363 

— evening, The. (Task.) Cow. 303 

— has a joy for me - Cow. 94 

— is come again - Wil. 304 

— is come again, the sweet southwest - - Wil. 304 

— is past, The— a song - Burns 218 

— is past ; the heart of nature warms - - Hoi. 99 

— journey over Hartz mountains - - - Goe. 168 

— morning walk, The. (Task.) - - - Cow. 321 

— night, A ----- - Burns 63 : Sch. 330 

— nosegay, A - - - - - Cow. 431; Hood 542 

— Ode to - - Cam. 177 

— of life, The — a song Burns 270 

— piece, A - - - Bry. 29;' (Lowell.) Flo. 291 

— song - Ing. 441 

— Summer and - She. 432 

— traveler, The— a sonnet - White 313 

— walk at noon, The. (Task.) - Cow. 342 
Winter's cold drift lies glistening o'er his breast Hoi. 268 

— know easily to shed the snow - - - Erne. 193 
Winter's tale — a comedy - Sha. 304 
Wirtemberg. See Wiirtemberg. 

Wisdom - Cow. 55 

— and spirit of the universe ! - Wor. 506 

— Knowledge and. (Cowper.) - - - Fav. 124 

— unapplied ------- B ro . 270 

Wish of to-day, The Whi. 150 

— The - - Rog. 242 

Wishes Pro. 165 

Wishing— a sonnet ------ Ing. 443 

— gate destroyed, The Wor. 202 

— gate, The -------- Wor. 202 

Wit that can creep and pride that licks the dust Pope 273 

W itch of Atlas, The ----- - She. 345 

— of the Alps, c. in Manfred - Byron 87 

— of Wenham, The ----- - Whi. 401 

Witch's daughter, The ----- Whi. 218 

With a bridegroom's joyous bearing - - Goe. 112 

— a cold and wintry moonlight - - - Whi. 68 

— a diamond - - Ing. 437 

— a dull heavy tread ----- Sch. 38 

— a half glance upon the sky - Ten. 15 

— a painted ribbon— a song - - - - Goe. 50 

— a smile on her lips ------ Scott 86 

— added days, if life give nothing - - Pope 398 

— all appliances and means - Sha. 422 

— all my soul, then, let us part - Moore 108 

— an auspicious and a dropping eye - - Sha. 813 



A1K "Winter 

O10 With 

With beams December planets dart - - Erne. 240 

— blackest moss the flower-plots - - - Ten. 9 

— clearer light, cross of the south, shine forth Whi. 338 

— copious eulogy in prose or rhyme - - Wor. 495 

— dazzled eyes, whilst wondering - - Dante 332 

— devotion's visage and pious - Sha. 826 

— drooping bells of clearest blue - - - Flo. 205 

— each recurrence of this glorious morn - Wor. 230 

— eagerness he drinks the treacherous - Goe. 236 

— echoing steps the worshipers - Pro. 92 

— equal pace, as oxen in the yoke - - Dante 160 

— farmer Allan at the farm abode - - - Ten. 69 

— favoring winds o'er sunlit seas - Lon. 394 

— few opinions but of faithful heart - - Eliot 106 

— fingers weary and worn - Hood 123 

— foreheads villainous low - Sha. 17 

— glorious clouds encompassed round - - Wes. 328 

— how sad steps, O moon ----- Wor. 238 

— hue like that when some great painter dips She. 133 

— just enough of learning to misquote - Byron 178 

— little here to do or see - Wor. 146 

— many a pause and oft reverted eye - - Col. 96 

— many a thousand kiss not yet content - Goe. 216 

— no poetic ardor fired ----- Pope 390 

— no rich viands overcharged, I send - - Cow. 566 

— one black shadow at its feet - Ten. 25 

— one last bumper let us hail - - - Sch. 287 

— other fair ones to the shades go down - Pope 395 

— our late vicar, and his age the same - Cra. 440 

— Pegasus upon a day - Burns 116 

— poverty of spirit blest - Wes. 58 

— roses musky-breathed ----- Ten. 482 

— sacrifice before the rising morn - - Wor. 191 

— scornful mien and various toss of air - - Pope 374 

— seeds and bird-lime, from the desert air - Cow. 517 

— Shakespeare's manhood at a boy's wild heart Ros. 294 

— shape to shape all day ... - Mer. 191 

— ships the sea was sprinkled far and nigh - Wor. 233 

— sick and famished eyes - Her. 247 

— sickly actors and an old house too - - Dry. 502 

— sixty knights in his gallant train - - Hem. 252 

— smiies like those of summer - Bry. 135 

— smiling plenty and fair prosperous days ! Sha. 591 

— stammering lips and insufficient - - - Bro. 81 

— that he bowed his saintly brow - - P. of F. 128 

— the same heart, I said, I'll answer thee - Bro. 161 

— too much quickness ever to be taught - Pope 234 

— triumph this morning, O Boston ! - Moore 204 

— twenty chords my lyre is hung - - Moore 58 

— two spurs, or one, and no great matter which Cow. 609 



With 
Words 



616 



With unescutcheoned privacy interred - Wor. 666 

— useless endeavor, forever, forever - - Lon. 346 

— what a glory comes and goes the year ! - Lon. 7 

— what inward joy sweet lay - Goe. 379 
Withdraw not yet those lips - Cam. 216 
Withering— withering. (Hoffman.) - - Flo. 196 
Withers, G. Marigold, The - - - - Flo. 159 

Withers, Gen. Henry, Epitaph on - - - Pope 346 

Withholder, The - - - - - - P. of F. 171 

Within a cavern of man's trackless spirit - She. 575 

— a glowing charnel-house one day - - Goe. 207 

— a town where purity ----- Goe. 233 

— a well two buckets lie - Sch. 194 

— each spirit's hidden depths - Fav. 85 

— her gilded cage confined - Wor. 151 

— our happy castle there dwelt one - - Wor. 103 

— that awful volume lies - Scott 425 

— the book and volume of my brain - - Sha. 818 

— the chamber far away - Goe. 41 

— the kingdom of my soul - Pro. 282 

— the limit of becoming mirth ... Sha. 139 

— the mind strong fancies work - Wor. 195 

— this goblet, rich and deep - Moore 45 

— this lowly grave a conqueror lies - - Bry. 220 

— us all a universe doth dwell - - - Goe. 257 

— yourselves deliverance must be sought L. of A. 146 
Without a stone to mark the spot - - Byron 246 

— a voice he cried ------ Wes. 244 

— and within ------- Low. 340 

— haste ! without rest ! - - - - - Fav. 423 

— her — a sonnet ------ R s. 253 

— one bitter feeling let us part - - - Pro. 157 
Witlaf , a king of the Saxons - - - Lon. 132 
Witness, The - - - - - - P. of F. 110 

Witnesses, The ------ Lon. 43 

Woe for mine vine-clad home ! - - - - Wil. 288 

— oh, woe ! what strains enthralling - - Sch. 348 

— to the crown that doth the cowl obey ! - Wor. 360 

— to thee, Simon Magus ! woe to you - - Dante 63 

— to you, prelates ! rioting in ease - - - Wor. 366 

— worth the hour when it is crime - - Low. 104 
W^olfe, Charles. Burial of Sir John Moore - Fav. 35 
Wolsey, Cardinal, c. in Henry viii. - - Sha. 592 
Woman - - - Cra. 515; Gol. 138; Moore 192 

— A - - - Whi. 374 

— experience might have told me - - Byron 141 

— Forum of Sch. 260 

— Ideal of -------- Sch. 261 

— in everything yields to man - - - Sch. 261 

— in her deepest degradation holds something Lon. 45 



£1 7 With 

01 » Words 

Woman is the lesser man - Ten. 93 

— in travail, For a ----- - Wes. 105 

— never judge man by his individual - - Sch. 260 

— take an elder than ------ Sha. 289 

— on the field of battle Hem. 234 

— Power of Sch. 234 

— Praise of ------- Seh. 219 

— Province of. (Hannah More.) - - - Fav. 239 

— Eecords of Hem. 149 

— Rights of - - Burns 139 

— the power who left his throne on high - Wor. 377 

— To - - - - - - - - Byron 141 

— Truth of — a song Scott 449 

— Virtue of- - - Sch. 260 

Woman's answer, A Pro. 321 

— at best a contradiction still - Pope 238 

— faith and woman's trust - Scott 449 

— four seasons. (Bailey.) - Fav. 239 

— last word, A - Pro. 342 

— love (anon.) ------- Fav. 138 

— question, A - - - - - - - Pro. 44 

— reason; I think him so because - - - Sha. 22 

— shortcomings, A Bro. 295 

Women, Of the characters of - - - - Pope 231 

— Sura of - - . - - - - P. of F. 90, 167 
Women's minds — a song - - - - Burns 229 
Wonder not, sovran mistress, if perhaps - Mil. 205 
Wonderful juggler, The - - - - White 376 

— one-hoss shay, The ----- Hoi. 172 
Wondrous and awful are thy silent halls - Low. 64 
Wont and done — a song ----- Goe. 88 
Woodbine. (Shakespeare.) - Flo. 133 
Wooden bridge at Westminster - - - Tho. 430 
Woodlark, Address to the— a song - - Burns 283 
Woodman and the nightingale, The - - She. 456 

Woodnotes - Erne. 43, 48 

Woods in winter Lon. 7 

Woodspurge, The Ros. 150 

Woodstock Park— a sonnet - Lon. 384 

Woodville, c. in Henry vi., pt. 1 - - - Sha. 469 

Woolman's journal, With a copy of - - Whi. 109 
Worcester, Earl of (Thomas Percy), c. in 

Henry iv., pt. 1 ----- Sha. 382 

Word for the hour, A ----- Whi. 261 

Words - Pro. 114 

— are lighter than the cloud-foam - - - Pro. 124 

— are like leaves, and where they most - Pope 48 

— like to these were said, or dreamed - - Mer. 195 

— of error Sch. 243 

— of faith Sch. 242 



'Words 
Words-wortli 



618 



Words of fire and words of scorn - - - Mer. 

— on window-pane — a sonnet - Ros. 

— pass as wind but where great deeds - Low. 

— Power of — an essay .._•-._ p e 

— that wise Bacon or brave Raleigh spoke Pope 



206 
298 
410 
190 
315 
822 



words, words ------- Sha. 

Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher, To - Wor. 250, 492 
— John, In memory of Wor. 492 

WORDSWORTH, WILLIAM, Poems of: 



A book came forth of late, called 

Peter Bell .... 230 

— little onward lend thy guiding 

hand 425 

— poet ! — he has put his heart to 

school 247 

— volant tribe of Bards— a sonnet 233 
Aar, Fall of the,— Handec— a son- 
net 295 

Abuse of Monastic Power— a son- 
net 366 

Acquittal of the Bishops— a sonnet 373 
Address from Spirit of Cocker- 
mouth Castle . . .398 

— to daughter Dora . . . 158 

— to Village Scholars . . 489 
Adieu, Rydalian Laurels !— a son- 
net 397 

Admonition— a sonnet . . . 226 
Advance— come forth from thy 

Tyrolean 278 

Aerial Rock— whose solitary brow 228 
Affections, Poems on the . . 93 
Affliction of Margaret . . . Ill 
Afflictions of England . . .371 
After-thought ... 296, 333 
Ah, think how one compelled . 444 

— where is Palafox? . . .280 
Ailsa Crag in an eclipse— a sonnet 404 
Airey-Force Valley . . .169 
Aix-la-Chapelle— a sonnet . . 293 
Alas ! what boots the long labori- 
ous quest .... 278 

Alban Hills, From the— a sonnet 314 
Albano, At— a sonnet . . .314 
Alfred the Great — a sonnet . 359 
Alice Fell; or, Poverty ... 81 
America, Christianity in . . 374 
American Episcopacy— a sonnet 375 

— Tradition— a sonnet . . 330 
Among a grave fraternity of 

Monks 437 

And is it among rude untutored 

Danes 278 

— what melodious sounds— a son- 

net 363 

Anecdote for Fathers . . .84 
Another year!— another deadly 

blow 275 

Anticipation — a sonnet . . 274 
Apennines, At a convent in the . 319 
Apologies— sonnets . 357, 367, 389 
Applethwaite, At . . . .227 
April Mornings, Two . . . 417 
Aquapendent, Musings near . . 308 
Architecture, Rural ... 85 
Armenian Lady's Love, The . . 130 
Artegal and Eiidure 9S 



As faith thus sanctified— a sonnet 364 

— leaves are to the tree— a son- 

net 441 

— indignation mastered grief— a 

sonnet 319 

Author's portrait, To the— a son- 
net 246 

Avarice, Last stage of . . 485 
Avaunt, all specious pliancy of 

mind 281 

Avon, Tne— a sonnet . . . 388 
Bala-Sala, Isle of Man— a sonnet 403 
Bangor, Old, Monastery of— a 

sonnet 356 

Baptism — a sonnet .... 376 
Battle of Waterloo— a sonnet . 286 
Beaumont, Sir G. H., Epistle to . 445 

— To Lady— a sonnet . . . 237 
Beautiful Picture, On a— a sonnet 228 
Before the world had passed— a 

sonnet . . . . . 443 

Beggars 174 

Beloved Vale ! I said— a sonnet . 226 
Bible, Translations of the— a son- 
net 368 

Bird of Paradise, On a drawing 

of a 438 

Suggested by a . . .209 

Birthday, Sixty-third . . .390 
Biscayan, Feelings of a noble— a 

sonnet 281 

Bishops and Priests— a sonnet . 375 
Bishopstone, Antiquities discov- 



Inscription on a 



245 



ered at . 
Black Comb, 

stone at 

View from top of . 

— Stones cf Iona— a sonnet 
Blank leaf, On a — a sonnet . 
Blest Statesman He, whose mind 

unselfish .... 
Blind Highland Boy . 
Bologna, In— a sonnet . 
Bolton Priorv, Founding of 
Books. (The Prelude.) . 
Borderers, The— a tragedy 
Bothwell Castle— a sonnet 
Braes of Kirtle, The . 
Bran, On banks of the . 
Brave Schill !— a sonnet 
Breadalbane's Ruined Mansion 
Brientz, Scene on the Lake of . 
Britons, Struggle of the— a sonnet 356 
Brook! whose society the Poet 

seeks 239 

Broom and the Oak ... 143 

Brothers, The 93 

Brougham Castle, Feast of . 186 



467 

. 198 

407 



261 
440 
423 

527 
43 
388 
254 



296 



619 



"Words 
"Wordsworth 



Brownie, The— a sonnet . . 387 
Brownie's Cell, The . . . 265 
Bruges— a sonnet .... 292 
Burial-place in Scotland— a sonnet 383 
Burns Robert, At grave of . . 252 

To the sons of 254 

But hore no cannon thunders . 333 
Butte? fly, To a . . . 79,101 
Calais, Composed at— a sonnet . 269 
Call -iot the royal Swede unfortu- 
nate 280 

Calm is all nature ... 15 

— ii- the fragrant air . . . 390 
Canialdoli, Convent of — a sonnet 316 
Cambridge and the Alps . .535 
Canute— a sonnet . . . 3 JO 

— and Alfred on sea-shore. . 424 
Capital Punishment, Sonnets on 442 
Captivity— Mary, Queen of Scots— 

a sonnet .... 233 
Castle in Wales, Composed at a— 

a sonnet .... 243 
Casual Incitement— a sonnet . 356 
Catechising— a sonnet . . . 376 
Cathedrals— a sonnet . . . 380 
Catholic Canton, Composed in a 295 
Cave of Staffa— a sonnet . . 406 
Celandine, Small .... 484 

— To the 147 

Cenotaph near Worcester . . 489 
Change me, some God, into that 

breathing .... 328 
Channel, In the— a sonnet . . 402 
Character, A .... 413 

— of the Happy Warrior . . 422 
Characteristics of a child . . 80 
Characters: Eleanor, wife of El- 

dred . . The Borderers 43 

— Eldred, a peasant " 43 

— Herbert . . "43 

— Idonea . "43 

— Lacy . "43 

— Lennox . "43 

— Marmaduke . "43 

— Oswald . "43 

— Wallace . . " 43 

— Wilfred, servant. " 43 
Charles the First— a sonnet . 371 

— the Second— a sonnet . . 372 
Chatsworth ! thy stately mansion 246 
Chaucer, Selections from, mod- 
ernized .... 470 

Chiabrera, Epitaphs translated 

from 486 

Chichely to Henry Fifth — a son- 
net 365 

Child, Address to a . . . .80 

— Characteristics of a . . 80 

— In album of a . . . 458 

— of the clouds!— a sonnet . 327 
Childbirth, Thanksgiving after— 

a sonnet .... 377 
Childhood and school-time. (Pre- 
lude.) 501 

Childless Father, The . . .113 
Christianity in America . . 374 
Church of San Salvador . . 298 

— to be erected— a sonnet . . 379 
Churchyard among the Mountains 661 
Cintra, 'Convention of— a sonnet 277 
Cistertian Monasteiy— a sonnet . 363 



Civil and Religious Liberty— a son- 
net 

Clerical Integrity— a sonnet . 

Clermont, Council of— a sonnet 

Clouds, To the .... 

Clyde, Frith of— Ailsa Craig 

Cockermouth, In sight of— a son- 
net 

Coldly we spake— a sonnet . 

Coleorton Hall, Musings at 

— Inscription in grounds of . 
Collins, Remembrance of . 
Cologne, Cathedral in— a sonnet . 
Commination Service, The 
Compassion !— pity !— pride can do 

without .... 
Complacent Fictions were they— 

a sonnet . . . 
Complaint, A 

— of an Indian Woman 
Confirmation— a sonnet . 
Congratulation— a sonnet . 
Conjectures — a sonnet . 
Contrast, The .... 
Convent of Camaldoh — a sonnet . 

— in the Apennines — a sonnet . 
Convention of Cintra— a sonnet . 
Conversion — a sonnet . 

Cora Linn, Composed at 

Cordelia, To— a sonnet 

Corruptions of the Higher Clergy 

Cottager to her Infant 

Council of Clermont — a sonnet . 

Countess' Pillar— a sonnet 

Covenanters, Persecution of the . 

Cranmer, Thomas— a sonnet . 

Crescent-moon, The 

Crosthwaite Church, Inscription 
for 

Crusaders— a sonnet . 

Crusades— a sonnet 

Cuckoo and the Nightingale (mod- 
ernized) 

— at Laverna .... 

— To the 168, 

— Clock, The .... 
Daisy, To the . . . 145, 416, 
Daniel in the Lion's den 
Danish Boy, The .... 

— Conquests— a sonnet 
Danube, Source of the— a sonnet . 
Darling, Grace .... 
Dart, the greyhound, In memory 

of 

Death penalty, Sonnets on the 
Dedication of Sonnets 
Degenerate Douglas! 
Departing summer hath assumed 
Departure from Vale of Grasmere 
Deplorable his lot who tills the 

ground 

Derwent, River, To the— a sonnet 
Descendants of Alfred— a sonnet . 
Descriptive Sketches . 
Desire we past illusions to recall? . 
Despond who will "—I heard a 

voice 

Despondency. (The Excursion.) 

— corrected. (The Excursion.) . 
Desponding Father ! mark this . 
Desultory stanza? .... 



373 
373 
3(51 

208 
404 



494 
465 
21 
294 
377 

67 

313 
106 
108 
377 
379 
354 
151 
316 
319 
277 
357 
266 
411 
366 
112 



373 



364 
361 

474 
315 
244 
207 
491 
388 
152 
360 
294 



44* 

25U 

427 
252 

363 



404 
6-21 



we 



"Wordsworth 



620 



Devotional incitements . 206 

Did pangs of grief for lenient . 403 
Dion ... . 193 

Dirge— " Mourn, Shepherd" . 490 
Discourse of the Wanderer. (The 

Excursion.) .... 697 
Dissensions— a sonnet . . 356 
Dissolution of the Monasteries . 386 
Distractions — a sonnet . . 370 
Dog, Incident of a . . . .420 
Dogmatic Teachers . . . 240 
Donnerdale, Plain of . .331 

Dora, To my daughter . . 158 
Dover, At— a sonnet . . . 306 

— Composed near— a sonnet . 271 

— Valley of— a sonnet . . . 305 
Douglas Bay, On entering— a son- 
net 402 

Down a swift Stream . . . 374 
Druidical Excommunication — a 

sonnet 355 

Druids, Trepidation of the . 354 
Duddon, River— a series of son- 
nets 326 

Dunolly Castle, On Revisiting— a 

sonnet 404 

— Eagle, The— a sonnet . . 404 

Duty, Ode to 421 

Dyer, John, To— a sonnet . . 229 
E. B., To Lady— a sonnet . . 243 
Eagles— a sonnet .... 383 
Earth, Invocation to the . . 493 
Ecclesiastical Sonnets . . 354 
Echo upon the Gemmi— a sonnet 303 
Eclipse of the Sun, 1820 . . 300 
Eden, River, Cumberland— a son- 
net 408 

Edward Sixth— a sonnet . . 368 
Effusion at Altorf ... 297 

— in a pleasure ground . . 266 
Eglantine and Waterfall . . 142 
Egremont Castle, Horn of . . 455 
Egyptian Maid, The . . .321 
Ejaculation— a sonnet . . .381 
Elegiac stanzas .... 304 
Elidure, Artegal and . . .98 
Elizabeth, Queen— a sonnet . 370 
Ellen Irwin; or, Braes of Kirtle . 254 
Emigrant French Clergy . . 379 

— Mother, The . . . .114 
Emperors and Kings, how oft 

have temples . . . 287 
Engelberg, hill of the Angels . 296 
Enghien, Due d', Disinterment of 286 
England! the time is come— a 

sonnet 273 

English Reformers in Exile— a 

sonnet 370 

Enough of climbing toil ! . . 426 
Enterprise, To .... 196 
Enthusiasts and the French Rev- 
olution 190 

Episcopacy in America— a sonnet 375 
Epistle to Sir G. H. Beaumont . 445 
Epitaphs:— Chiabrera, Translated 

from 486 

— Langdale chapel-yard, In . 489 

— Poet's epitaph, The . . 415 

— Vernon, Mary, To . .489 
Ere with cold beads of midnight 

dew 104 



Ere yet our course was graced 

—a sonnet ... 328 
Eremite Convent of Camaldoii 317 
Even so for me a Vision . . 232 
Evening Walk, An ... 15 

— Voluntaries 390 

Event in Ancient History, On an 276 
Excursion, The .... 595 
Expostulation and Reply . . 412 
Fact and Imagination . . . 424 
Fair Prime of Life! ... 234 
Fairy Chasm, The— a sonnet . 329 
Fall "of the Aar— Handec . . 295 
Fallen and diffused into a shape- 
less 332 

Falling leaves and the Kitten . 157 
Fame tells of groves — a sonnet 242 
Fancy and Tradition— a sonnet . 389 

— Poems of the .... 141 
Farewell, A 102 

— lines 133 

Farmer of Tilsbury Vale . . 483 
Fast — March, 1832— a sonnet . 438 
Fate of the Nortons . . .334 
Fathers, Anecdotes for . . 84 
Feast at Brougham Castle . . 186 
Feel for the wrongs to universal 

ken 441 

Feelings of a French Royalist . 286 
Fermor, Frances, Cenotaph in 

memory of ... . 489 
Festivals have I seen that were 

not names .... 270 

Fidelity 421 

Field of Waterloo— a sonnet . 293 
Filial piety— a sonnet . . . 246 
Fish-women— on landing at Calais 292 
Fit retribution by the moral code 443 
Fleming, Lady, To . . . 454 
Floating Island . . . .453 
Florence, At .... 318 
Flower Garden, A . . . . 142 
Flowers— a sonnet . . . 328 

— on the top of Pillars . . .406 
Fly, some Kind Harbinger— a 

sonnet 261 

For action born, existing to be tried 315 
Force of Prayer, The . . .423 
Foresight— a sonnet ... 79 
Forms of Prayer at Sea . . 378 
Forsaken, The .... 105 

Fort Fuentes 298 

Forth from a jutting ridge . 140 
Fountain, A . . . . . 417 
Four fiery steeds, impatient of the 

rein 239 

France, Negroes expelled from 271 

— Residence in .... 560 
French and Spanish Guerrillas 282 

— army in Russia .... 283 

— Revolution. The . . .190 

On histories of the . . 439 

Friend, To a 399 

Friend's Marriage, On a . .231 
Frith of Clyde, On the . 404 

From false assumption rose— a 

sonnet 362 

From the dark chambers of de- 
jection 234 

— this deep chasm— a sonnet . 330 
Funeral Service— a sonnet . . 378 



621 



"Wordsworth 



Furness Abbey, At— a sonnet . 251 
George the Third, On Death of 242 
Germans on heights of Hockheim 284 
Germany, Written in . . . 415 
Glad Tidings— a sonnet . . . 357 
Gleaner, The .... 452 
Glen-Almain; or, the Narrow Glen 256 

— of Loch Etive, Composed in . 384 
Go back to antique ages, if thine 

eyes 277 

Gold and silver fishes . . .449 
Goody Blake and Harry Gill . 456 
Gordale— a sonnet .... 240 
Grace Darling . 460 

Grasmere, Composed at . . 493 

— Inscription at . . . . 466 

— Lake, Composed near . . 277 
Gravestone at Worcester Cathe- 
dral 245 

Great men have been among us 272 
Greece, Liberty of— a sonnet . 276 
Green Linnet, The . . .146 
Greenock— a sonnet . . . 407 
Greta, what fearful listening!— a 

sonnet 397 

Grief, Maternal .... 112 

— thou hast lost an ever ready 

friend 230 

Growth of a Poet's mind . . 501 
Guerrillas, French and Spanish— a 

sonnet 282 

Guernica, Oak of —a sonnet . 281 
Guilt and Sorrow . . . .32 
Gunpowder Plot— a sonnet . 371 

Gypsies 175 

H. C, To. (Six years old.) . 87 
Had this effulgence disappeared . 393 
Hail, Zaragoza— a sonnet . . 279 
Hambleton Hills, Journey across 235 
Hard task!— a sonnet . . . 440 
Hark ! 'tis the Thrush— a sonnet . 248 
Harp and Needlecase . . .150 
Hart-leap Well . . . .163 
Hart's-horn tree, near Penrith . 339 
Hast thou seen with flash incessant 469 
Haunted Tree, The . . .199 
Haydon, Benjamin R., To — a son- 
net £34 

Haydon's portrait of Napoleon— a 
"sonnet 247 

— portrait of Wellington— sonnet 247 
Helvellyn, Ascent of . . . 197 
Her eyes are wild .... 134 

— only pilot the soft breeze . 227 
Here pause; the poet claims at 

least 282 

Hermit's cell, Inscriptions found 

near 468 

Highland Brooch, The— a sonnet 336 

— Girl, To a 254 

— Hut— a sonnet . . . .336 
Hint from the Mountains . . 150 
Hints for the Fancy — a sonnet . 339 
Hockheim, Germans on heights 

of 284 

Hofer, Andreas— a sonnet . . 278 
Hogg. James, On death of . 497 
Holy and Heavenly Spirits— a son- 
net 370 

Homeward we turn— a sonnet . 407 
Honor— a sonnet .... 279 



Hopes, what are they ?— an inscrip- 
tion 468 

Horn of Egremont Castle . . 455 
How clear, how keen, how mar- 

velously bright . . . 236 

— rich that forehead's calm ex- 

Sinse! 106 
I paint thee?— a sonnet 327 

— soon, alas ! did Man— a sonnet 362 

— sweet it is, when Mother Fancy 234 
Howard, Mrs., Monument of . 408 
Humanity . . . . .428 
Hymn for boatmen on the Neckar 294 
I am not one who much or oft de- 
light 418 

— dropped my pen— a sonnet . 277 

— grieved for Bonaparte— a sonnet 270 

— heard (alas ! "twas only in a 

dream) 235 

— saw the figure of a lovely maid 372 

— traveled among unknown men 104 

— wandered lonely as a cloud . 172 

— watch and long have watched . 234 
Idiot Boy, The .... 119 
Idle Shepnerd Boys . . . h3 
If these brief Records— a sonnet 241 

— this great world of joy and pain 433 
Illustration — a sonnet . . 371 
Imagination and Taste . . .581 

— Fact and an . . . 424 

— ne'er before content — an ode . 287 

— Poems of the .... 168 
Imaginative Regrets— a sonnet . 367 
Immortality— a sonnet . . 381 

— Intimations of . . . . 498 
In copy of '• Castle of Indolence " 103 

— desultory walK: througii orchard 

grounds .... 458 

— due observance of an ancient 

rite 280 

— my mind's eyes a Temple — a 

sonnet 250 

— these fair vales hath many a tree 468 
Incident at Bruges . . . 293 

— of a dog 420 

Independence, Resolution and . 178 
Indignation of a Spaniard . . 281 

Infant M M , a sonnet . 244 

InUuence abused— a sonnet . . 360 

— of Natural Objects ... 87 
Inglewood Forest, In— a sonnet . 388 
Inland, within a hollow vale — a 

sonnet 271 

Inscriptions 465 

Intent on gathering wool from 

hedge 249 

Interdict, An— a sonnet . . 361 
Intimations of Immortality . . 498 
Intrepid sons of Albion!— a sonnet 286 
Introductory to Ecclesiastical 

Sonnets .... 354 
Invasion, Expected . . . 274 
Invocation to the Earth . . 493 
Iona— a sonnet .... 407 

Irwin, Ellen 254 

Is Death, when evil against good 442 

— there a power that can sustain? 280 
Isle of Man— a sonnet . . . 403 

At sea off the— a sonnet . 402 

It is a beauteous evening, calm 

and free .... 232 



"Wordsworth 



622 



It is no Spirit who from heaven 

hath flown .... 189 

— is not to be thought of that the 

Flood 272 

— was an April morning . . 135 
Italian Itinerant, The . . .299 
Italy, After leaving— a sonnet . 319 

— Memorials of Tour of . . 307 
Jedborough, Matron of . . . 260 
Jewish Family, A ... 209 
Joan of Kent, Execution of . . 368 

Joanna, To 136 

Jones ! as from Calais southward 269 
Journey renewed— a sonnet . 332 
Julia, Vaudracour and . . .115 
Jung-frau, The .... 371 
Kendal and Windermere Railway 251 

— Vicar of, On death of . . 494 
Kent, To the men of— a sonnet . 274 
Kilchurn Castle, To . . .257 
Killiecrankie Pass, In the— a son- 
net 

King's College Chapel— a sonnet 
Kirk of Ulpha— a sonnet 
Kirkstone, Pass of 195 

Kitten and Falling Leaves . . 157 
Laborer's Noon-day Hymn 
Lamb, Charles, On Death of . . 495 
Lament of Mary Queen of Scots 107 
Lancaster Castle, In view of— a 

sonnet 442 

Laodamia 191 

Last of the Flock, The . . 109 

— Supper, The. (Da Vinci.) . . 300 
Latimer and Ridley— a sonnet . 369 
Latitudinarianism— a sonnet . 372 
Laud, Archbishop — a sonnet . 371 
Laverna, Cuckoo at 315 
Leaving School, On ... 15 
Ledbury, St. Catherine of . .239 
Let other bards of angels sing . 106 
Liberty 450 

— and Order, Sonnets to . . 438 
Like a shipwrecked sailor tost . 430 
Liturgy, The— a sonnet . . 375 
Lol where she stands fixed— a 

sonnet 248 

Lombardy, In— a sonnet . . 319 
London, Residence in. (The Pre- 
lude.) 544 

— Written in— a sonnet . . 272 
Long Meg and her Daughters— a 

sonnet 409 

— favored England !— a sonnet . 439 
Longest Day, The . . . .88 
Lonsdale, Countess of, To . . 459 

— Earl of, To— a sonnet . . 409 
Look at the fate of summer flowers 105 

— now on that Adventurer— a son- 

net 280 

Louisa, after an excursion .104 

L'Ouverture, Toussaint, To . 271 
Love lies Bleeding . . . .155 
Loving and Liking . . . 132 
Lowther ! in thy majestic Pile— a 

sonnet 409 

— Lady Mary, To . . . .236 
Lucy Gray; or, Solitude . . 82 
Lycoris, Ode to .... 425 
Lyre, though such power . . 174 
M. H., To 138 I 



MacPherson's Ossian, On blank 

leaf of . . . : .405 
Malham Cove— a sonnet . . 240 
Manse in Scotland— a sonnet . 384 
March, Written in . . . .174 
Mark the concentrated hazels 

that enclose . . . .235 
Marriage Ceremony, The— a son- 
net 377 

Mary, Queen of Scots— a sonnet 399 

Captivity of— a sonnet . . 239 

Lament of . . . . 107 

Maternal Grief . . . .112 
Matron of Jedborough . . 260 

Matthew 416 

May, To 434 

— morning, Composed on a— a 

sonnet 247 

Ode on a 433 

Memorials of Tour on the Conti- 
nent 292 

— of Tour in Italy ... 307 

— of Tour in Scotland . . .252 

Memory 428 

Men of the Western World— a son- 
net 440 

Methinks that to some vacant 

hermitage .... 358 

— 'twere no unprecedented feat . 332 
Methought I saw the footsteps of 

a throne 232 

Michael— a pastoral ... 123 

— Angelo, From— a sonnet . . 318 

From Italian of . . .231 

Milton! thou should'st be living 

at this hour . . .272 
Mine ear has rung — a sonnet . 380 
Missions and Travels— a sonnet 359 
Monasteries, Dissolution of the — a 

sonnet 366 

Monastery of Old Bangor— a sonnet 356 
Monastic Power, Abuse of —a son- 
net . . . . . . 366 

— Voluptuousness — a sonnet . 366 
Monks and Schoolmen — a sonnet 363 
Moon and Venus, The . . .395 

— On the— a sonnet . . . 238 

— To the . . . . 238,395 
Morning Exercise, A . . .141 
Moscow, Burning of— a sonnet . 283 
Most sweet it is with unuplifted 

eyes 411 

Mountains, Hint from the . . 150 
Mother's Return, The . . 81 
Music, Power of . . .172 

Musings near Aquapendent . 308 
Mutability— a sonnet . . .378 
My heart leaps up when I behold 79 
Naming of Places, Poems on . 136 
Namur and Liege, Between . 293 
Napoleon, On portrait of —a sonnet 247 
Narrow Glen, The . . .256 
National Independence, Poems to 269 
Near Anio's stream— a sonnet . 314 
Needlecase and harp . . . 150 
Negroes expelled from France . 271 
New Churchyard— a sonnet . 380 

— Churches— a sonnet . . . 379 
Newspaper, After reading a . 438 
Night-piece, A . . . . .169 

— Thought. A .... 420 



623 



Wordsworth 



Nightingale, To the . . . . 171 
Nith, Thoughts on banks of . 253 
No mortal object did these eyes 

behold 231 

Nor can I not believe . . .419 
Norman Boy, The ... 89 

— Conquest, The— a sonnet . . 380 
Nortons, Fate of the . . . 334 
Not envying Latian shades— a 

sonnet . . . . . 327 

— hurled precipitous from steep 

to steep .... 333 

— in the lucid intervals of life . 3J1 

— Love, not War, nor the tumul- 

tuous swell .... 235 

— so that Pair whose youthful 

spirits 329 

— to the object specially designed 443 
Now that all hearts are glad . . 284 
Nunnery— a sonnet . . . 408 
Nuns fret not at then convents" 

narrow room . . . 226 

— Well, Brigham— a sonnet . . 398 

Nutting 170 

O dearer far than light and life . 107 

— for a dirge ! 494 

— mountain stream ! 330 

— what a Wreck !— a sonnet . 249 
Oak and the Broom, The . . 143 

— of Guernica — a sonnet . . 281 
Obligations of Civil to Religious 

Liberty .... 373 
Ode on a May morning . . .433 

— on Immortality . . . 498 

— to Duty 421 

— to Lycoris .... 425 
O'er the wide earth on mountain 

and plain .... 279 
O'erweening Statesmen have full 

long relied .... 282 
Oker Hill, Tradition of . . .246 
Old Abbeys— a sonnet . . 379 

— Age, Poems on . . . . 480 

— Cumberland Beggar, The . 480 
On to Iona— a sonnet . . .406 
Once I could hail (howe'er serene 

the sky 453 

One might believe that natural 

miseries 273 

Open Prospect— a sonnet . . 329 
Other Benefits— a sonnet . . 363 

— influences— a sonnet . . 358 
Our bodily life, some plead . . 443 

— Lady of the Snow . . .296 
Oxford University, To — a sonnet 241 
Painted tower of Tell at Altorf . 297 
Painter, To a— a sonnet . . . 248 
Palafox? Ah, where is . . 280 
Papal Abuses— a sonnet . . 362 

— Dominion— a sonnet . . 362 
Parrot and Wren . . . .151 
Parsonage, The. (The Excursion.) 690 

— in Oxfordshire— a sonnet . . 242 
Pass of Killiecrankie — a sonnet 260 

— of Kirkstone, The . . .195 
Pastor, The. (The Excursion.) 649 
Pastoral Character— a sonnet . 375 
Patriotic Sympathies— a sonnet 372 
Paulinus— a sonnet . . . 357 
Pause, traveler!— an inscription 468 
Peele Castle. Picture of . . .490 



Pelion and Ossa flourish side by 

side 227 

Pennsylvanians, To the— a sonnet 440 
Persecution— a sonnet . . . 355 
Persecution of the Covenanters — a 

sonnet 375 

Personal Talk . . . .418 
Persuasion— a sonnet . . . 357 
Pet-lamb, The— a pastoral . . 86 
Peter Bell— a tale . . . .214 
Piety, Decay of— a sonnet . . 230 
Pilewort, To the. (Celandine.) . 147 
Pilgrim Fathers, The— a sonnet 374 
Pilgrim's Death, The . . .153 
Pillar of Trajan .... 320 
Pine of Monte Mario at Rome . 312 
Places of Worship — a sonnet . 375 

— Poems on naming of . . . 136 
Plain of Donnerdale— a sonnet . 331 
Plays: The Borderers— a tragedy 43 
Plea for Authors— a sonnet . 249 

— for the historian— a sonnet . 313 
Poet and caged Turtle-dove . 154 
Poet's Dream, The— a sequel . 90 

— Epitaph, A 415 
Point at Issue, The— a sonnet . 368 
Poor Robin 452 

— Susan, Reverie of 172 
Portrait of Henry the Eighth — a 

sonnet 242 

Poverty, Alice Fell; or . . 81 
Power of Music . . . .172 

— of Sound 210 

Praised be the Rivers— a sonnet . 365 
Prayer, Force of ... 423 

Prelude, The ; or, Growth of Poet's 

Mind 501 

Presentiments: .... 204 
Primitive Saxon Clergy— a sonnet 358 
Primrose of the Rock . . 203 
Prioress' Tale, The (modernized) 470 

Processions 303 

Prophecy, A— a sonnet . . . 276 
Proud were ye, Mountains— a son- 
net 251 

Punishment of Death,Sonnets upon 442 
Pure element of waters— a sonnet 240 

Q , To Rotha— a sonnet . 245 

Queen of the stars .... 396 
Raisley Calvert, To memory of— a 

sonnet 233 

Ranz des Vaches— a sonnet . 297 
Raphael's picture of the Baptist . 318 
Recovery— a sonnet . . . 355 
Redbreast chasing the Butterfly . 149 

— To a (in sickness) . . . 452 
Reflection, Poems of . . .412 
Reflections— a sonnet . . . 3C8 
Reformation, The— a sonnet . 369 
Reformers, Eminent— a sonnet 370 
Regrets— a sonnet . . . . 37 8 

— at Rome — a sonnet. . .313 
Remembrance of Collins . . 21 
Repentance— a pastoral ballad 110 
Reproof— a sonnet .... 859 
Residence at Cambridge. (The 

Prelude.) . . ... 514 
Resolution and Independence . 178 
Rest and be Thankful— a sonnet . 386 
Resting-place, The — a sonnet . 332 
Retired Mariner, By a— a sonnet 403 



"Wordsworth 



624 



Retirement— a sonnet . . 235 
Retrospect— Love of Nature . 553 
Return— a sonnet . . . 330 

— Content ! . . . . . 332 
Reverie of Poor Susan . . 172 
Revival of Popery— a sonnet . 368 
Rhine, On banks of the— a sonnet 294 
Richard the First — a sonnet . 3t51 
Ridley, Latimer and— a sonnet . 369 
River Duddon— a series of sonnets 3 X 
Rob Roy\s Grave . . . .258 
Robinson, Henry C, To . . 307 
Roman Antiquities— a sonnet . 3i9 
at Bishopstone— a sonnet . 245 

— Consul, The, doomed his sons . 442 

— Refinements, Temptations from 355 



Romance of the Water-lily 
Rome, At— a sonnet . 
Roses, Wars of the— a sonnet 
Roslin Chapel, Composed in 
Rural Architecture 

— Ceremony — a sonnet 

— Illusions .... 



321 
313 
355 
3i4 
85 
378 
156 

Russia, French army in— a sonnet 283 
Russian Fugitive, The . . .461 

Ruth 176 

Rydal, Composed at— a sonnet . 318 

— In the Woods of— a sonnet . 243 

— Mere, By side of . . . .392 
Rylstone, White Doe of . .331 
S. EL, To— a sonnet . . .230 
Sacheverel— a sonnet . . . 374 
Sacrament — a sonnet . . . 377 
Said secrecy to cowardice . . 439 
Sailing in a boat at evening . . 21 
Sailor's Mother, The . . .113 
Saint Catherine of Ledbury — a 

sonnet 239 

— Herbert's Island, Inscription in 469 

— Peter's, In sight of— a sonnet 314 
Saints— a sonnet .... 367 
Salisbury Plain, Incidents upon 32 
San Salvador, Church of . . 298 
Saragossa !— a sonnet . . .279 
Saxon Conquest— a sonnet . . 356 

— Monasteries — a sonnet . . 359 
Say, what is Honor?— a sonnet . 279 
Scene in Venice— a sonnet . . 362 
Schaffhausen, Fall of — a sonnet . 371 
Schwytz, Town of— a sonnet . 297 
Scorn not the Sonnet . . .233 
Scott's departure for Naples . 383 
Seashore, Composed by the . . 394 

— Isle of Man .... 402 
Seaside, By tne . . . .391 

— Composed by the . . . 269 
Seasons, Thoughts on the . . 430 
Seathwaite Chapel— a sonnet . 330 
Seclusion— a sonnet . . . 358 
See the condemned alone within 

his cell 444 

Sentiment and Reflection, Poems 

of 412 

Seven Sisters, The ... 148 

Sexton, To a 144 

She dwelt among the untrodden 

ways 104 

— was a Phantom of Delight 171 
Sheep-washing— a sonnet . . 331 
Simon Lee, the old huntsman . 414 
Simplon Pass, The . . . .170 



Simplon Pass, Composed in the 302 
Sister, To my 413 

Sky-lark, To a . . 147, 190 

— prospect— from Plain of France 305 
Slave Trade, Abolition of— a son- 
net 276 

Sleep, To— sonnets . . .228 
Small Celandine, The . . 147, 484 
Snow-drop, To a— a sonnet . 236 
So fair, so sweet, withal so sensi- 
tive 437 

Sobieski, John. (Siege of Vienna.) 286 
Soft as a cloud .... 392 
Sole listener, Duddon !— a sonnet 328 
Solitary, The. (The Excursion.) G10 

— Reaper, The . ... .257 
Solitude, Lucy Gray; or . . 82 

— of Binnorie 148 

Somnambulist, The ... 409 
Sonnets, Ecclesiastical . . . 354 

— on Punishment of Death . 442 

— to Liberty and Order . . 438 

— to the River Duddon . . 326 
Sonnets : A book came forth of late 230 

— A poet : he has put his heart 247 

— A volant Tribe of Bards . . 233 

— Aar, Fall of the— Handec . 295 

— Abuse of Monastic Power . . 366 

— Acquittal of the Bishops . . 373 

— Address from Spirit of Cocker- 

mouth Castle . . . 398 

— Adieu, Rydalian Laurels ! . . 397 

— Admonition .... 226 

— Advance, come forth from thy 

Tyrolean .... 278 

— Aerial Rock — whose solitary 

brow 228 

— Afflictions of England . . 371 

— After-thought .... 333 

— Ah, think now one compelled 

for life .... 444 

— Ah! where is Palafox? . .280 

— Ailsa Crag in an eclipse . 404 

— Aix-la-Chapelle .... 293 

— Alas ! what boots the long labo- 

rious 278 

— Alban Hills, From the . . 314 

— Albano, At 314 

— Alfred the Great . . .359 

— American Episcopacy . .375 

— American Tradition . . 330 

— And is it among rude untutored 278 

— And what melodious sounds 363 

— Another year! another deadly 

blow! 275 

— Anticipation .... 274 

— Apennines, At a convent in the 319 

— Apologies .... 657, 367 

— Appletiiwaite, At . . . 2z7 

— As faith thus sanctified . . 364 

— As indignation mastered grief 319 

— As leaves are to the tree . . 441 

— Author's portrait, To the . 246 

— Avaunt all specious pliancy of 

mind 281 

— Avon, The 388 

— Bala-Sala, Isle of Man . . 403 

— Bangor, Old, Monastery of . 356 

— Baptism 376 

— Battle of Waterloo . . .286 

— Beaumont, Lady, To . .237 



625 



"Wordsworth 



Sonnets: Beautiful Picture, On a 

— Before the world had passed 

— Beloved vale ! I said . 

— Bible, Translation of the 

— Biscayan, Feelings of a noble . 

— Bishops and Priests 

— Bishopstone, Antiquities dis- 

covered at . 

— Black Stones of Iona 

— Blank leaf, On a 

— Blest Statesman He, whose 

Mind's 

— Bologna, In 

— Bothwell Castle 

— Brave Schill ! 

— Breadalbane's Ruined Mansion 

— Britons, Struggle of the 

— Brook ! whose society the Poet 



— Brownie, To .... 

— Bruges 

— Burial-place in Scotland . 

— But here no cannon thunders 

— Calais, Composed at . 

— Call not the royal Swede unfor- 

tunate 

— Camaldoli, Convent of . 

— Canute 

— Captivity— Mary Queen of Scots 

— Castle in Wales, Composed at a 

— Casual Incitement . 

— Catechising 

— Cathedrals .... 

— Cave of Staffa .... 

— Change me, some god, into that 

breathing rose ! 

— Channel, In the 

— Charles the First 

— Charles the Second 

— Chatsworth! thy stately man- 

sion 

— Chichely to Henry V. 

— Child of the Clouds 

— Childbirth, Thanksgiving after 

— Church to be erected 

— Cintra, Convention of 

— Cistertian Monastery 

— Civil and Religious Liberty 

— Clerical Integrity . 

— Clermont, Council of 

— Clyde, Frith of 

— Cockermouth, In sight of 

— Coldly we spake 

— Cologne Cathedral, In 

— Commination Service, The . 

— Complacent fictions were they 

— Confirmation .... 

— Congratulation . 

— Conjectures .... 

— Convent in the Apennines 

— Convent of Camaldoli . 

— Convention of Cintri 

— Conversion 

— Cordelia, To 

— Corruptions of the 

Clergy . 

— Council of Clermont 

— Countess' Pillar . 

— Covenanters, Persecution of the 

— Cranmer, Thomas 

— Crusaders .... 

40 



Higher 



443 



375 



269 



316 



406 



Sonnets: Crusades . . . .361 

— Cuckoo, To the . . .244 

— Daniel in the Lion's den . . 388 

— Danish Conquests . . . 360 

— Danube, Source of the . . 294 

— Degenerate Douglas ! . . 259 

— D'Engihen, Duke of. Disinter- 

ment of . . . . .286 

— Deplorable his lot who tills the 

ground 3C3 

— Derwent, River, To the . . 398 

— Descendants of Alfred . . 359 

— Desire we past illusions to recall 402 

— Despond who will — I heard a 

voice 404 

— Desponding Father ! mark this 

altered bough . . .238 

— Did pangs of grief for lenient 403 

— Dissensions . . . ,.'..... 356 

— Dissolution of the Monasteries 366 

— Distractions .... 370 

— Dogmatic Teachers . . 240 

— Donnerdale, Plain of . . . 331 

— Douglas Bay, On entering . 402 

— Dover, At .... 271,306 

— Dover, Valley of . . . 305 

— Down a swift Stream . . 374 

— Druidical Excommunication 355 

— Druids, Trepidation of the . 354 

— Dunolly Castle, On revisiting 404 

— Dunolly Eagle, 1 he . . .404 

— Dyer, John, To 229 

— E. B., To Lady . . . .243 

— Eagles 385 

— Echo upon the Gemmi . . 303 

— Eden, River, Cumberland . 408 

— Edward the Sixth . . .368 

— Ejaculation .... 381 

— Elizabeth, Queen . . .370 

— Emigrant French Clergy . 379 

— Emperors and Kings, how oft . 287 

— England ! the time is come . 273 

— English Reformers in Exile . 370 

— Episcopacy in America . . 375 

— Ere yet our course was graced 328 

— Eremite Convent of Camaldoli 317 

— Even so for me a Vision . . 232 

— Event in Ancient History, On an 276 

— Fair Prime of Life! . . 234 

— Fairy Chasm, The . . .329 

— Fall of the Aar— Handec . 295 

— Fallen and diffused into a 

shapeless .... 332 

— Fame tells of groves . . . 242 

— Fancy and Tradition . . 389 

— Fast March, 1832 . . . .438 

— Feel for the wrongs to universal 

ken 441 

— Feelings of a French Royalist . 286 

— Festivals have I seen that were 

not 270 

— Field of Waterloo, After visiting 293 

— Filial piety 246 

— Fish-women— on landing at 

Calais 292 

— Fit retribution by the moral 

code . . . . . 443 

— Florence, At . . . .318 

— Flowers 328 

— Flowers on the top of Pillars 406 

— Fly, some kind Harbinger . 261 



"Wordsworth 



626 



Sonnets: For action born, exist- 
ing to be tried . . . 315 

— Forms of Prayer at Sea . . 378 

— Four fiery steeds impatient of 

therein .... 239 

— France, Negroes expelled from 271 

— French and Spanish Guerrillas 282 

— French army in Russia . . 283 

— French Eevolution, On histories 

of the 439 

— Friend, To a . . . .399 

— Friend's Marriage, On a . . 231 

— Frith of Clyde, On the . . 404 

— From false assumption rose . 362 

— From the dark chambers of de- 

jection 234 

— From this deep chasm . . 330 

— Funeral Service . . . .378 

— Furness Abbey, At . . . 251 

— George the Third, On death of . 242 

— Germans on Heights of Hock- 

heim 284 

— Glad Tidings . . . .357 

— Glen of Loch Etive, Composed in 384 

— Go back to antique ages if thine 

eyes 277 

— Gordale 240 

— Grasmere Lake, Composed near 277 

— Gravestone at Worcester Cathe- 

dral 245 

— Great men have been among us 272 

— Greece, Liberty of . . . 276 

— Greenock, Scotland . . . 407 

— Greta, what fearful listening! 397 

— Grief, thou hast lost an ever 

ready 230 

— Guerrillas, French and Spanish 282 

— Guernica, Oak of . 281 

— Gunpowder Plot . . . .371 

— Zaragoza ! .... 279 

— Hambleton Hills, Journey across 235 

— Hard task! 440 

— Hark! 'tis the Thrush . . 248 

— Hart's-horn tree near Penrith , 3S9 

— Haydon, Benjamin R., To . 234 

— Haydon's port-rait of Napoleon 247 

— Haydon's portrait of Wellington 247 

— Her only pilot the soft breeze . 227 

— Here pause: the poet claims at 

least this 282 

— Highland Brooch, The . . 386 

— Highland Hut . . . .386 

— Hints for the Fancy . . 329 

— Hockheim, Germans on heights 

of . . . - . . .284 

— Hofer, Andreas . . . .278 

— Holy and Heavenly Spirits . 370 

— Homeward we turn . . .407 

— Honor 279 

— How clear, how keen, howmar- 

velously .... 236 

— How shall I paint thee ! . .327 

— How soon, alas ! did man . . 362 

— How sweet it is when Mother 

Fancy 234 

— Howard, Mrs., Monument of . 408 

— I am not one who much or oft 418 

— I dropped my pen . . . 277 

— I grieved for Bonaparte . 270 

— I heard (alas ! 'twas only in a 

dream) .... 255 



Sonnets: I saw the figure of a 372 

— I watch and long have watched 234 

— If these brief Records . . 241 

— Illustration .... 371 

— Imaginative Regrets . . . 367 

— Immortality . . . .381 

— In due observance of an ancient 280 

— In my mind's eyes a Temple 250 

— Indignation of a Spaniard . 281 

— Infant M—M . . . 244 

— Influence abused . . . 360 

— Inglewood Forest, In . . 388 

— Inland within a hollow vale . 271 

— Intent on gathering wool from 

hedge 243 

— Interdict, In . . . .361 

— Intrepid sons of Albion ! . . 286 

— Introductory to Ecclesiastical 

sonnets 354 

— Iona 407 

— Is Death, when evil against 

good 442 

— Is there a power that can sus- 

tain? 280 

— Isle of Man .... 403 

— Isle of Man. At sea off the . 402 

— It is a beauteous evening, calm 

and free 232 

— It is not to be thought of that 

the Flood . . . .272 

— Italy, After leaving . . 319 

— Joan of Kent, Execution of . 368 

— Jones! as from Calais south- 

ward you and I . . . 269 

— Journey renewed . . . 332 

— Jung-frau, The . . . .371 

— Kendel and Windermere Rail- 

wav, On the . . . .251 

— Kent, To the Men of . . 274 

— Killiecrankie Pass, In the . . 260 

— King's College Chapel . . 330 

— Kirk of Ulpha, The . . . 333 

— Lancaster Castle. In view of 442 

— Latimer and Ridley . . . 369 

— Latitudinarianism . . . 372 

— Laud, Archbishop . . . 371 

— Ledbury, St. Catherine of . £3J 

— Liturgy, The . . . .375 

— Lo ! where she stands fixed . 248 

— Lombardy, In ... . 319 

— London, Written in . . 272 

— Long Meg and her daughters . 409 

— Long-favored England ! . 43.) 

— Lonsdale, Earl of, To . . 409 

— Look now on that adventurer 280 

— L'Ouverture, Toussaint, To . 271 

— Lowther! in thy majestic Piie 409 

— Lowther. Lady Mary, To . .237 

— Malham Cove .... 240 

— Manse in Scotland . . . 384 

— Mark the concentered hazels 

that enclose .... 235 

— Marriage Ceremony, The . 377 

— Mary, Queen of Scots . . 399 

— Mary, Queen of Scots— Captivity 239 

— May morning, Composed on a 247 

— Men of the Western World . 440 

— Methinks that to some vacant 

hermitage .... 358 
-- Methinks 'twere no unprece- 
dented feat .... 332 



627 



"Wordsworth 



Sonnets : Methought I saw the foot- 
steps of a throne . . 232 
— - Michael Angelo, From . . 318 

— Michael Angelo, From Italian of 231 

— Milton ! thou should'st be living 272 

— Mine ear has rung . . . 380 

— Missions and Travels . . . 359 

— Monasteries, Dissolution of the 366 

— Monastery of Old Bangor . . 356 

— Monastic Power, Abuse of . 366 

— Monastic Voluptuousness . . 366 

— Monks and Schoolmen . . 363 

— Moon, On the . . . .238 

— Moon, To the . . . . 238 

— Moscow, Burning of . . . 283 

— Most sweet it is with unuplifted 

eyes 411 

— Mutability .... 378 

— Namur and Liege, Between . 293 

— Napoleon, On portrait of . 247 

— Near Anio's stream I spied . 314 

— Negroes expelled from France 271 

— New Churchyard . . .380 

— New Churches . . . 379 

— Newspaper, After reading a . 438 

— No mortal object did these eyes 231 

— Norman Conquest, The . . 330 

— Not envying Latian shades . 327 

— Not hurled precipitous from 

steep to steep . . . 333 

— Not Love, not War, nor the tu- 

multuous swell . . . 235 

— Not so that Pair whose youth- 

ful spirits . . .329 

— Not to the object specially de- 

signed 443 

— Now that all hearts are glad . 284 

— Nunnery 408 

— Nuns fret not at their convent's 

narrow .... 226 

— Nun's Well, Brigham . . 398 

— O mountain stream . . 330 

— O, what a Wreck! . . .249 

— Oak of Guernica . . .281 

— Obligations of Civil to Religious 

Liberty . . . .373 

— O'er the wide earth, on mount- 

ain 279 

— O'erweening Statesmen have 

full long .... 282 

— Oker Hill, Tradition of . .246 

— Old Abbeys .... 379 

— Ontolona! 406 

— One might believe that natural 273 

— Open Prospect . ... . 329 

— Other benefits .... 363 

— Other influences .... 358 

— Our bodily life, some plead . 443 

— Oxford University, To . .241 

— Painter, To a . . . .248 

— Palafox? Ah, where is . . 280 

— Papal Abuses .... 332 

— Papal Dominion .... 3li2 

— Parsonage in Oxfordshire . 242 

— Pass of Killiecrankie . . .260 

— Pastoral Character . . 37'5 

— Patriotic Sympathies . . 372 

— Paulinus 337 

— Pelion and Ossa nourish side . 227 

— Pennsylvanians. To the . . 440 

— Persecution . . . . 355 



Sonnets: Persecution of the Cove- 
nanters .... 

— Persuasion 

— Piety, Decay of 

— Pilgrim Fathers, The 

— Pine of Monte Mario at Rome 

— Places of Worship 

— Plain of Donnerdale 

— Plea of Authors .... 

— Plea for the Historian . 

— Point at issue, The 

— Portrait of Henry the Eighth 

— Praised by the Rivers 

— Primitive Saxon Clergy 

— Prophecy, A .... 

— Proud were ye, Mountains . 

— Pure element of waters . 

— Q , To Rotha 

— Raisley Calvert, To memory of 

— Ranz cles Vaches 

— Raphael's picture of the Bap- 

tist . . . . . . 

— Recovery 

— Reflections 

— Reformation, The 

— Reformers, Eminent 

— Regrets 

— Regrets at Rome 

— Reproof 

— Rest and be Thankful 

— Resting-place, The 

— Retired Mariner, By a . 

— Retirement . 

— Return 

— Return, Content! 

— Revival of Popery . 

— Rhine, On banks of the 

— Richard the First . 

— Ridley, Latimer and . 

— Roman Antiquities . 

— Roman Antiquities at Bishop- 

stone . . 

— Roman Consul doomed his sons 

— Roman Refinements, Tempta- 

tions from .... 

— Rome, At 

— Roses, Wars of the . 

— Roslin Chapel, Composed in . 

— Rural Ceremony 

— Russia, French army in 

— Rydal, Composed in . 

— Rydal, In the woods of . 

— S. H.,To 

— Sacheverel ..... 

— Sacrament 

— Said Secrecy to Cowardice . 

— Saint Catherine of Ledbury 

— Saint Peter's, In sight of 

— Saints 



373 

357 
230 
374 
312 
375 
331 
249 
313 
368 
242 
365 
358 
276 
251 
240 
245 
233 
297 

318 
355 



235 
330 
332 

294 
361 

3G9 



245 
442 

355 
313 
365 
384 
378 
283 
319 
243 
230 
374 
377 



— Saxon Conquest . 

— Saxon Monasteries . 

— Say, what is Honor? . 

— Scene in Venice 

— Schaffhausen, Fall of 

— Schwytz, Town of . 

— Scorn not the Sonnet 

— Scott's departure for Naples 

— Sea-shore, Isle of Man 

— Seaside, Composed at the 

— Seathwaite Chapel . 



314 
367 
279 
356 
359 
279 
362 
371 
297 



402 



"Wordsworth 



628 



Sonnets: Seclusion . . . 358 

— See the Condemned alone with- 

in his cell .... 444 

— Sheep-washing . . . .331 

— Sky-prospect from Plain of 

France 305 

— Slave Trade, Abolition of . 276 

— Sleep, To 228 

— Snow-drop, To a . . 233 

— Sobieski, John. (Siege of Vi- 

enna.) 286 

— Sole listener, Duddon ! . . 328 

— Soon did the Almighty Giver 448 

— Sound of Mull, In the . 385 

— Source of the Danube . . 294 

— Spaniard, Indignation of a .281 

— Spanish Guerrilla . . . 282 

— Sponsors 376 

— Staffa, Cave of 405 

— Staub-bach, On approaching 

the 295 

— Steamboats, Viaducts, Rail- 

ways 409 

*- Stepping-stones, The . . . 328 

— Storm, During a . . .236 

— Stranded near Harbor of Bou- 

logne 305 

— Struggle of the Britons . . 356 

— Such age how beautiful ! . 245 

— Supreme Being, To the . . 231 

— Surprised by joy— impatient as 

the Wind . . . .232 

— Sweden, King of . 270 
»— Switzerland, Subjugation of . 271 
?— Take, cradled Nursling of the 

mountain .... 327' 

— Temptations from Roman Re- 

finements .... 355 

— Tenderly do we feel by Nature's 

law 442 

— Thanksgiving after Childbirth 377 

— The fairest, brightest hues of 

ether fade .... 227 

— The formal world relaxes her 

cold 444 

— The martial courage of a day is 

vain 279 

— The most alluring clouds that 

mount 247 

— The pibroch's note discounte- 

nanced 384 

— The power of armies is a visible 

thing 282 

— The Shepherd looking eastward 237 

— The stars are mansions built . 238 

— The world is too much with us 233 

— There is a bondage worse . . 273 

— There is a little unpretending 

rill 227 

— There is a pleasure in poetic 

pains 237 

— There ! said a stripling . . 407 

— These times strike moneyed 

worldlings .... 273 

— They call Thee Merry England 397 

— They dreamt not of a perisha- 

ble home . . . .381 

— They who have seen the noble 

Roman's scorn . . . 313 

— Those words were uttered as 

in pensive .... 236 I 



Sonnets: Though I beheld at first 248 

— Though narrow be that old 

man's cares . . . 239 

— Though the bold wings of 

Poesy . . . . 241 

— Though to give timely warning 443 

— Thrasymene, Near Lake . 314 

— 'Tis He whose yester-evening's 

high disdain . . . 248 

— Torrent at Devil's Bridge, To 

the 243 

— Town of Schwytz . , .297 

— Tradition 331 

— Tradition, Fancy and . . 389 

— Tranquillity! .... 408 

— Transubstantiation . . . 364 

— Trepidation of the Druids . 354 

— Tributary stream . . .331 

— Trosachs, The .... 384 

— Troubles of Charles the First . 371 

— Twilight, To . . . .238 

— Tyndrum in a storm . . . 385 

— TynwaldHill .... 403 

— Tyrolese, Feelings of the . . 278 

— Tyrolese, Submission of the . 279 

— Uncertainty 355 

— Valedictory sonnet . . . 249 

— Vaudois, The . . . .364 

— Venetian Republic, Extinction 

of 270 

— Venice, Scene in 362 

— Venus, To the Planet . . 250, 337 

— Vienna, Siege of . . .286 

— Virgin, The 367 

— Visitation of the sick . . 377 

— Wait, prithee, wait ! . . . 244 

— Waldenses, The . . .365 

— Walton's Book of Lives . . 372 

— Wansfell ! this Household has 250 

— Wars of York and Lancaster . 365 

— Waterloo, After visiting . 293 

— Waterloo, Battle of . . .286 

— Weak is the Will of Man . 233 

— Well have yon Railway labor- 

ers 251 

— Wellington, Hay don's portrait 

of 247 

— Westminster Bridge, Com- 

posed on . . .241 

— Westmoreland Valley, In a . 230 

— Wetherell Church, In . .408 

— What aspect bore the man . 328 

— What awful perspective ! . 380 

— What of our numbers barely 

could defy . . . .274 

— When far and wide . . . 276 

— When haughty expectations 

prostrate .... 237 

— When I have borne in memory 272 

— When looking on the present 

face 273 

— When Philoctetes in the Lem- 

nian isle .... 244 

— Whence that low voice? . . 331 

— Where lies the Land to which 

yon ship 232 

— Where long and deeply . . 364 

— While Anna's peers and early 

playmates .... 244 

— While beams of orient light . 250 

— While not a leaf seems faded 236 



629 



Wordsworth 



Sonnets: Who ponders National 

events 439 

— Who swerves from innocence 333 

— Why art thou silent? . . .246 

— Why, Minstrel, these untuneful 

murmurings .... 228 

— Why should the Enthusiast? 397 

— Why sleeps the future as a 

snake 381 

— Wild Duck's Nest, The ' . . 229 

— William the Third . . .373 

— With ships the sea was sprinkled 233 

— Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher, 

To 250 

— Wycliffe, John de . . .365 

— Ye brood of conscience— Spec- 

ters! 443 

— Ye sacred Nurseries of bloom- 

ing Youth .... 241 

— Ye shadowy Beings . . . 406 



— Yes, though He well may 

tremble . 

— Yet many a novice . 

— Young England . 

— Zaragoza ! . 

Soon did the Almighty Giver 
Sound of Mull, In the 

— Power of 
Source of the Danube . 
Spade of a Friend, To the 
Spaniard, Indignation of a 
Spanish Guerrilla . 
Sparrow's Nest, The . 
Spinning-wheel, Song for the 
Sponsors— a sonnet 
Spring, In early 
Staffa, Cave of— a sonnet 
Star and the Glow-worm 



444 
367 
441 
279 
448 
385 
210 
294 
419 
281 
282 
79 
150 
376 
413 
405 
153 
173 

Staub-bach, On approaching the 295 
Steamboat, Suggested in a . 399 
Steamboats, Viaducts and Rail- 
ways 409 

Stepping-stones, The— a sonnet 328 

— Westward 256 

Stone, F., Pencil portrait by . 435 
Storm, During a— a sonnet . . 236 
Stranded near Harbor of Bou- 
logne 305 

Strange fits of passion . . 104 
Stray Pleasures . . . .153 
Struggle of the Britons . . 356 
Such age how beautiful ! . . 245 
Summer Vacation. (The Prelude.) 522 
Sun, Eclipse of the, 1820 . . .300 
Supreme Being, To the . . 231 
Surprised by joy— impatient as 

the Wind .... 232 
Sweden, King of— a sonnet . . 270 
Swiss Goatherd, The ... 299 
Switzerland, Subjugation of . .271 
Tables Turned, The . .. . 412 
Take, cradled Nursling of the 

mountains .... 327 
Taste, Imagination and . . .581 
Temptations from Roman Refine- 
ments 355 

Tenderly do we feel by Nature's 

law 442 

Thanksgiving after Childbirth . 37? 

- Ode 288 



The fairest, brightest hues of 

ether fade . . . .227 

— formal World relaxes her cold 

chain 444 

— martial courage of a day is vain 279 

— most alluring clouds that mount 247 

— pibroch's note .... 384 

— power of armies is a visible 

thing 282 

— shepherd looking eastward . 237 

— stars are mansions built by 

Nature's hand , . . 238 

— world is too much with us— a 

sonnet 233 

There is a bondage worse— a son- 
net 273 

— is a little unpretending Rill . 227 

— is a pleasure in poetic pains . 237 
-- is an Eminence . . .137 

— said a stripling— a sonnet . . 407 

— was a boy 168 

These times strike moneyed world- 
lings 273 

They call Thee Merry England . 397 

— dreamt not of a perishable 

home 381 

— who have seen the noble Ro- 

man's scorn .... 313 
This Lawn, a carpet all alive . 428 

Thorn, The 180 

Those words were uttered as in 

pensive .... 236 
Though I beheld at first— a sonnet 248 

— narrow be that old Man's cares 239 

— the bold wings of Poesy affect 241 

— to give timely warning and deter 443 
Thoughts on Banks of Nith . . 253 

— on the Seasons . . . 430 
Thrasymene, Near Lake . . 314 
Three Cottage Girls, The . . 301 

— years she grew in sun and shower 171 
Thun, Lake of, Memorial near . 295 
Tilsbury Vale, The . . .483 
Tintern Abbey, Lines at . . 187 
'Tis He whose yester-evening's 

high disdain . . . .248 

— said that some have died for 

love 105 

Torrent at Devil's Bridge, To the 243 
Tower of Tell at Altorf . . .297 
Town of Schwytz, The— a sonnet 297 
Tradition— a sonnet . . .331 

— Fancy and— a sonnet . . 389 
Trajan, Pillar of . . . .320 

Tranquillity! 408 

Transubstantiation— a sonnet . 364 
Trepidation of the Druids— a son- 
net 354 

Triad, The 199 

Tributary Stream— a sonnet . . 331 
Tribute to a Dog .... 420 
Troilus and Cressida (modern- 
ized) 478 

Trosachs, The— a sonnet . . 384 
Troubles of Charles the First . 371 
Turtle-dove and Poet . . .154 
Twilight, To— a sonnet . . 238 
Two April Mornings . . . 417 

— Thieves, The .... 485 
Tyndrum in a storm . . . 385 
Tynwald Hill— a sonnet . . 403 



Wordsworth. 
Wraith 



630 



279 
355 
249 
317 
364 
115 
270 
362 

. 395 
250, 337 

. 205 
. 489 

. 286 
. 367 
3<"7 
159 
244 
305 



Tyrolese, Feelings of the— a son 
net. 

— Submission of the 
Uncertainty — a sonnet 
Valedictory sonnet . 
Vallombrosa, Monastery at 
Vaudois, The— a sonnet 
Vaudracour and Julia 
Venetian Republic, Extinction of 
Venice, Scene in— a sonnet 
Venus and the Moon 

— To the planet . 
Vernal Ode .... 
Vernon, Mary, Epitaph to . 
Vienna, Siege of— a sonnet . 
Virgin, The— a sonnet . 
Visitation of the Sick— a sonnet 
Wagoner, The .... 
Wait, prithee, wait!— a sonnet 
Waldenses, The — a sonnet . 
Walton's Book of Lives— a sonnet 372 
Wanderer, The. (The Excursion.) 598 
Wandering Jew, Song for the . 153 
Wansf ell ! this household has . 250 
Warning, The— a sequel . . 431 
Warrior, Character of the Happy 422 
Wars of York and Lancaster— a 

sonnet 385 

Water-fowl 198 

— lily, Romance of the . . 331 
Waterfall and the Eglantine . 143 
Waterloo, After visiting— a sonnet 293 

— Battle of —a sonnet . . . 286 

We are Seven 83 

Weak is the will of Man, his judg- 
ment 233 

Well have yon Railway Laborers 251 
Wellington, Haydon"s portrait of 247 
Westminster Bridge, Composed on 241 
Westmoreland Girl, The . . 91 

— Valley, In a 230 

Wetheral Church, In— a sonnet 408 
What aspect bore the Man— a son- 
net 328 

— awful perspective !— a sonnet . 380 

— heavenly smiles, O lady mine 

— if our numbers barely could 

defy 274 

— trick of memory . . . 425 

— far and wide— a sonnet . . 276 

— haughty expectations prostrate 

lie 237 

— I have borne in memory . . 272 

— in the antique age of bow and 

spear 455 

— looking on the present face of 

things 273 

— Philoctetes in the Lemnian isle 244 



107 



What the soft hand of sleep . 284 

When, to the attractions of the 

busy world .... 139 

Whence that low voice V— a son- 
net 331 

Where lies the Land to which yon 

Ship 232 

— long and deeply— a sonnet . 364 
While Anna's peers and early play- 
mates 244 

— beams of orient light— a sonnet 250 

— not a leaf seems faded — a son- 

net 236 

White doe of Rylstone . . 334 
Who ponders National events . 439 

— rises on the banks of Seine . 275 

— swerves from innocence — a son- 

net . 333 

Why art thou silent : ; — a sonnet 246 

— Minstrel, these untuneful mur- 

murings 228 

— should the Enthusiast — a sonnet 397 

— sleeps t lie f uture, as a snake en- 

rolled 381 

Wicliffe. SeeWycliffe. 
Widow on Windermere Side . 129 
Wild Duck's Nest, Tne— a sonnet 229 
William the Third— a sonnet . 373 
Wings have we and as far as we 

can go 419 

Wishing-gate, The . . . .202 

destroyed, The . . .202 

With ships the sea was sprinkled 233 
Wordsworth, Christopher, To — a 

sonnet 250 

— John, In memory of . . 492 

— Rev. Dr., To , . . . 326 
Wren and Parrot .... 151 
Wren's Nest, The . . . .155 
Wycliffe,' John de— a sonnet . 365 
Wye, On Revisiting banks of the 187 
Yarrow Revisited . . . 382 

— unvisited 259 

— visited 268 

Ye brood of conscience— Specters ! 443 

— sacred Nurseries of Blooming 

Youth 241 

— shadowy Beings— a sonnet . 406 
Yes, it was the Mountain Echo . 190 

— thou art fair, yet be not moved 106 

— though He well may tremble . 444 
Yet life, you say, is life— a sonnet 418 



— many a novice— a sonnet 
Yew-tree, Lines on a . 

— trees .... 
Young England— a sonnet . 

— Lady, To a 
Zaragoza ! — a sonnet 



Wordsworth, William. Bouquet of lilies 

— — Daffodils 

Daffodils, The - - - - - - 

Daisy, The 

Laurel, The 

Mossgiel ------ 

Old man by the brook 

Primrose of the rock - 

Small celandine, To the - - 



• Flo. 
Flo. 

- Fav. 
Flo. 16, 

• Flo. 
Flo. 

■ Fav. 
Fav. 
Flo. 



267 
31 

. 169 
441 
198 

. 279 

161 

37 

28 
428 
154 
431 

78 
126 
138 



£> Q i "Words-worth. 

°^ L Wraith 

Wordsworth, William. Snow-drop, The - Flo. 20 

— William - Whi. 162 

After lecture on Hoi. 127 

Sonnet on portrait of Bro. 82 

To - - - - Col. 176; Hem. 406; She. 397 

Wordsworth's sonnets, On reading - - - Low. 22 

Work — a sonnet - Bro. 84 ; Ing. 443 

— and contemplation — a sonnet - - - Bro. 86 

— as much as thou wilt alone - - - Sch. 262 

— To be sung - Wes. 83 

— without hope - Col. 213; Flo. 514 

Workhouse clock, The Hood 129 

Workshop of Hephaestus, The ... Lon. 341 

World in the open air, The - - - - Hem. 346 

— is grown so bad Sha. 561 

— is with me, The — a sonnet - Hood 184 

— soul, The Erne. 23 

— The - Her. 170 

Worldlings in the shadow rest - - - Wes. 306 

Worldly treasures. (Bailey.) - Fa v. 187 

World's emancipation convention, The - Whi. 57 

— on worlds are rolling ever - She. 379 

— vanity, Visions of Spe. 674 

— wanderers, The - She. 464; Fav. 84 

— worth - - - - - - - - Eos. Ill 

Worn and footsore was the prophet - - Low. 18 

Worship - - - - Erne. 237; Hoi. 195; Whi. 123 

Worth makes the man and want of it - -Pope 215 

Wot ye not wher ther stont a litel toun - Cha. 493 

— ye of Solomon's signet graved - - - P. of F. 144 
Wotty, W. Lines on Goldsmith - - - Gol. 64 
Would I describe a preacher, such as Paul - Cow. 274 

— my Delia know if I love, let her take - - Cow. 28 

— take her with all faults - - - Sha. 233 

— that I were a tuneful lyre - - - Moore 59 

— that our scrupulous sires had dared - Wor. 378 

— we let our envy burst ----- Goe. 369 

— you know what joy is hid - Erne. 285 
Would'st thou be taught, when sleep - - Wor. 207 

— thou give pleasure at once - Sch. 269 

— thou have a serpent sting - Sha. ' 197 

— Thou insult the fallen man - Wes. 255 

— thou live long ? The only means - - Fav. 161 

— thou the blossoms of spring - Goe. 271 

— thou wear the gift of immortal bloom? - Hem. 432 
Wounded hare, On seeing a Burns 117 

— hussar, The Cam. 210 

— I sing, tormented I endite - Her. 259 
Wow, but your letter made me vauntie ! - Burns 171 
Wraith in the mist, A ----- Lon. 378 



Wraith 632 

Wraith of Odin, The ----- Lon. 250 

Wrangel, General, c. in The Piccolo-mini - Col. 407 

Wrangler, The— a parable - - - - Goe. 232 

Wrapper, Written in a - - - - Burns 123 

Wreath, A ------ - Her. 289 

— and the chain, The - Moore 153 
Wreathe in a garland the corn's golden ear Sch. 132 

— the bowl Moore 257 

Wreaths Flo._ 136 

— for the ministers Moore 327 

Wreck of Eivermouth, The - Whi. 297 

— of the Hesperus, The - - - Lon. 27; Fav. 412 

— The ------ Hem. 356; Fav. 246 

Wren and parrot ------ Wor. 151 

Wrens make prey where eagles dare not - Sha. 561 

— nest. The ------- Wor. 155 

Wrestling Jacob ------- Wes. 334 

Wretched soul bruised with adversity - Sha. 95 

Wright. Silas, On the death of - - - - Whi. 128 

Write to Sardis," saith the Lord - - - Cow. 66 

Writes in his Mesnevi -■"■"- - - P. of F. 68 

Written in 1834 Eog. 346 

Widfnoth, c. in Harold ----- Ten. 615 

Wiirtemburg, Groaner of Sch. 54 

Wiirtemberger, The ------ Sch. 321 

Wyath, Sir Thomas, c. in Queen Mary - Ten. 537 

Wycliffe, John de — a sonnet - Wor. 365 

Wye, On revisiting banks of the - - - Wor. 187 

W T yf of Bathes tale, The Cha. 197 

Xenia— epigrams Goe. 262 

Xenophanes - - Erne. 120 

Ximena, c. in Siege of Valencia - - - Hem. 434 

Ya Sin, Sura of P. of F. 184 

Yankee dialect, Notes on Low. 209 

Yankee girl, The Whi. 46 

Yardley oak - Cow. 479 

Yarico?' On Mrs. Kemble as Burns 182 

Yarrow revisited - Wor. 382 

— unvisited - Wor. 259 

— visited -------- Wor. 268 

Y e Apennines ! with all your fertile vales - Wor. 308 

— are welcome, peaceful realms of light - Sch. 337 

— banks and braes and streams around - Burns 242 

— banks and braes o' bonny Doon - - Burns 240 

— black and roguish eyes if ye command - Goe. 74 

— blustering brethren of the skies - - Dry. 557 

— bold to explain, describe, define - - - Wes. 298 

— brood of conscience — specters ! — a sonnet Wor. 443 



633 



"Wraith 
Ye 



Ye captive tribes that hourly work and weep Gol. 162 

— children of mortals the deities dread - Goe. 404 

— clouds ! that far above me float and pause - Col. 136 

— Cupids, droop each little head - - - Byron 133 

— fabled muses, I your aid disclaim - - Tho. 403 

— field flowers! the garden eclipse Cam. 221; Flo. 187, 529 

— flaming flowers and winged warriors bright Mil. 415 

— flowery banks o' bonny Doon - - - Burns 203 

— gallants bright, I rede ye right - - Burns 223 

— gentle spirits ! breathing from above - Spe. 586 

— gentle visitations of calm thought - - She. 504 

— gentlest gales ! oh, hither - White 217 

— gods, it doth amaze me Sha. 766 

— gods, was Strephon's picture blest - - Burns 322 

— good men of the commons, with loving - Mac. 101 

— hae lien wrang, lassie — a song - - Burns 220 

— harvests that wave in the breeze - - Burns 324 

— hasten to the grave— a sonnet - - - She. 434 

— have come late— but ye are come ! - - Col. 408 

— heavenly spirits, whose ashy cinders lie - Spe. 677 

— holy walls, that still sublime - - - Burns 125 

— hypocrites! are these your pranks? - Burns 187 

— Irish lords, ye knights and squires - - Burns 68 

— Jacobites by name — a song - - - Burns 

— know the ant that creeps upon the fig P. of F. 

— learned sisters, which have oftentimes - Spe. 

— let that passen," quod oure hoste, "as now Cha. 
- lieges of Thuringia ! whose just scorn Mer. 



— lime-trees, ranged before this hallowed urn Wor. 

— linnets, let us try, beneath this grove - Cow. 

— little stars ! hide your diminished rays - Pope 

— lords and common, men of wit - - Pope 

— love, and sonnets write ! Fate's strange - Goe. 

— many twinkling stars, who yet do hold - White 

— mariners of England - - - - - Cam. 

— men of wit and wealth, why all this - Burns 

— nymphs, if e'er your eyes were red - - Cow. 

— nymphs of Himera (for ye have shed - Cow. 

— nymphs of Solyma ! begin the song - - Pope 

— offspring of the morning sun - Sen. 

— powers and spirits of this nethermost - - Mil. 

— presences of nature in the sky - - - Wor. 

— sacred nurseries of blooming youth - - Wor. 

— sacred relic, which your marble keep - Dry. 

— scenes of my childhood - Byron 

— seek Jesus of Nazareth - - - Mer. 

— sentinels of sleep ------ Lon. 

— servants of God, your Master proclaim - Wes. 

— shades, where sacred truth is sought - - Pope 

— shadowy beings— a sonnet - - - Wor. 



246 
78 
645 
364 
329 
466 
616 
250 
383 
220 
304 
149 
183 
457 
586 
86 
45 
60 
507 
241 
318 
140 
282 
349 
26 
355 
406 



Ye 

Yet 



634 



Ye shadowy forms, again ye're drawing - Goe. 390 

— sister powers, who o'er the sacred groves Cow. 578 

— sons of earth, prepare the plow - - - Cow. 62 

— sons of old Killie, assembled by Willie - Burns 201 

— storms resound the praises of your King ! - Wor. 283 

— that have faced the billows and the spray Hoi. 108 

— too, must fly before a chasing hand - Wor. 367 

— tradeful merchants that with weary toil Spe. 690 

— trees ! whose slender roots entwine - - Wor. 319 

— true "loyal natives " attend to my song Burns 185 

— unseen spirits — a sonnet - White 347 

— vales and hills whose beauty hither drew - Wor. 498 

— Ve often, for our drunkenness - - - G-oe. 380 

— voices, that arose ------ Lon. 25 

— who believe in the beauty and strength - Lon. 95 

— who believe, stand ye steadfast - P. of F. 167 

— who have passed death's haggard hills - Eos. 270 

— who intelligent the third heaven move - She. 535 

— who, passing graves by night - - - Low. 84 

— who with warmth the public. (Hay ley.) White 460 

— whose aspirings court the muse of lays White 314 

— wild-eyed muses, sing the twins of Jove - She. 521 

— winds, ye unseen currents of the air - Bry. 188 
Yea, all which we inherit shall dissolve - - Sha. 16 

— from the table of my memory - - - Sha. 818 

— some have found right good to bear - P. of F. 126 
Year 1788, Elegy on --__-_ Burns 115 

— after year, unto her feet- - Ten. 102 
Yearly distress, The ----- Cow. 453 
Years following years steal something - - Pope 312 

— has the master been laboring - Sch. 266 

— since (but names to me before) - - - Whi. 371 

— spinning, A ------ Bro. 296 

Yellow leaves, how fast they flutter - - Ing. 467 

— violet, The ------ - Bry. 23 

Yelpers, The — a parable ----- Goe. 232 

Yes, be the glorious revel mine - - - Moore 44 

— call me by my pet name ! Bro. 161 

— child of suffering, thou mayest well - Hoi. 55 

— dear departed, cherished days - Hoi. 33 

— dear enchantress— wandering far - - Hoi. 49 

— dear, our love is slain ----- Pro. 281 

— even I was in Arcadia born - Sch. 79 

— faith is a goodly anchor - Low. 353 

— fled already is thy vital fire - - - White 213 

— grief will have way — but the fast - Moore 594 

— hope may with my strong desire keep pace Wor. 231 

— I am worse than thou didst once believe me Mer. 232 

— I answered you last night ... - Bro. 287 

— I beheld th' Athenian queen - Pope 400 



635 



Ye 
Yet 



Yes, I came from the spirits' land - - Hem. 133 

— I have seen the ancient oak - Hem. 139 

— I remember the white rose - - - Mer. 441 

— I was sad and anxious Pro. 229 

— if the intensities of hope and fear - - Wor. 375 

— if the Lord his mind reveal - Wes. 170 

— if there be some happier sphere - - Moore 452 

— if 'twere any common love - - - Moore 135 

— it is haunted, this quiet scene - - - Hem. 380 

— it is ours ! — the field is won - Hem. 324 

— it looked dark and dreary - Pro. 300 

— it was the mountain echo - Wor. 190 

— let them gather ! — Summon forth - - Whi. 57 

— loving is a painful thrill - Moore 37 

— my friends, that happier times - - - Sch. 120 

— once more that dying strain - - - White 358 

— our election's past, and we've been free - Cra. 346 

— pile the marble o'er him! - - - -Whi. Ill 

— sad one of Sion, — if closely resembling - Moore 262 

— sometimes to the sorrow-stricken - - Erne. 296 

— thank my stars ! as early as I knew - Pope 496 

— the moment shall decide ! Lon. 350 

— the year is growing old - - - Lon. 5 

— thou art fair, yet be not moved - - - Wor. 106 

— thou mayst sigh ------ Scott 455 

— thou hast met the sun's last smile - - Hem. 383 

— though he well may tremble— a sonnet - Wor. 444 

— 'tis she ! Those eyes ! that hair - - - Mer. 427 

— 'tis the pulse of life ! my fears were vain Eog. 336 

— 'tis the time I cried, impose the chain - - Pope 386 

— 'twas a cause as noble and as great - - Moore 515 

— 'twas in life's happy morning - - - Sch. 108 

— 'twill be over soon — a sonnet - - - White 348 

— tyrants, you hate us, and fear while you hate Hoi. 217 

— we have lived — one pang and then we part Pope 348 

— we know we must lose him - Hoi. 164 

— well your story pleads the cause - - Lon. 275 

— we've our borough vices, and I know - - Cra. 431 

— write if you want to, there's nothing - Hoi. 306 

— yes, it's very true, and very clear - - Hood 607 

— you have guessed it. The wild Rosecrantz Mer. 277 
Yesterday brown was still thy head - - Goe. 273 
Yestreen I had a pint o' wine - - - Burns 270 
Yet are they here the same unbroken knot - Wor. 175 

— for a time He strives with all - - - Wes. 236 

— for you I would be trebled twenty - - Sha. 193 

— I do fear thy nature ----- Sha. 791 

— I doubt not through the ages, one increasing Ten. 92 

— in the darksome crypt I left so late - - Hoi. 100 

— life," you say, " is life " — a sonnet - - Wor. 418 



I& 636 

Yet look on me— a sonnet ----- She. 500 

— love, mere love, is beautiful indeed - - Bro. 155 

— may a novice — a sonnet - Wor. 367 

— more, — round many a convent's blazing fire Wor. 366 

— myself no more than in the universe - Wil. 94 

— nature will not be in full possessed - - Erne. 280 

— not in vain, O river of yesterday - - Lon. 383 

— not quite did the doubts of Radna die - I. S. S. 59 

— oh ! when that wronged spirit - - - Bry. 190 

— once again, my harp, yet once again - White 353 

— once more, and once more, awake, my harp White 351 

— once more, O ye laurels ! and once more White 464 

— one smile more, departing Bry. 70 ; Fav. 125 ; Flo. 270 

— sometimes, in the gay and noisy street - Fav. 130 

— the first bringer of unwelcome news - - Sha. 410 

— there is fight to reach and truth to win L. of A. 97 

— there's many a slip 'twixt the cup - - Mer. 50 

— truth is keenly sought for, and the wind Wor. 372 

— who would have thought ----- Sha. 806 

— words are no deeds ----- Sha. 609 

— yet, Biscayans ! we must meet our foes - Wor. 281 
Ye've gathered to your place of prayer - Wil. 114 

Yew-tree, Lines on a Wor. 31 

Yew-trees -------- Wor. 169 

Yon bridge o'er the giddy abyss will conduct Sch. 114 

— cloud which floats in heaven - - L. of A. 85 

— snow-white cloud that sails sublime in ether Lon. 346 

— wandering rill that marks the hill - Burns 291 

— whey-faced brother, who delights to wear Hoi. 103 

— wild mossy mountains — a song - - Burns 237 
Yond Cassius hath a lean and hungry look Sha. 766 
York, Archbishop of (Richard Scroop), c. in 

Henry iv., pt. 1 ----- Sha. 382 

(Rotherham), c. in Richard iii. - - Sha. 556 

York, Duchess of, c. in Richard ii. - - Sha. 356 

c. in Richard iii. ----- Sha. 556 

To - - Dry. 45, 276 

York, Duke of, uncle of king, c. in Richard ii. Sha. 356 

cousin of Henry v. , c. in Henry v. - Sha. 439 

(Richard Plantagenet), c. in Henry vi., 

pt. 2 - - Sha. 496 

(Richard, son of Edward iv.), c. in Rich- 
ard iii. Sha. 556 

Yorktown Whi. 70 

You are going to marry my pretty relation Mer. 246 

— are my true and honorable wife - - - Sha. 771 

— are old, father William, the young man cried Fav. 417 

— ask me, why, though ill at ease - Ten. 56 

— ask what flowers I love the best - - Flo. 420 

— beat your pate and fancy wit will come - Pope 376 



637 



Yet 
You 



You bid me, Ned, describe the place - - White 308 

— bid me sing, — can I forget - Hoi. 287 

— bid me write to amuse the tedious hours Cow. 548 

— both remember well the day - - Moore 548 

— call it "Love lies bleeding" - - - Wor. 155 

— cast to ground the hope which once was mine Ten. 470 

— did late review my lays ---■;- Ten. 482 

— flung your taunt across the wave - - Whi. 264 

— gave your cheeks a rosy stain - - - Cow. 521 

— have displaced the mirth - Sha. 800 

— have heard " a Spanish lady - - - "Wor. 130 

— have taken back the promise - - - Pro. 129 

— have too much respect ... - Sha. 181 

— hear that boy laughing? - Hoi. 214 

— know if it was you ----- Wil. 191 

— know the place is just the same - - - Mer. 440 

— lie — under a mistake - - -'"•-- - She. 537 

— love all you say ------ Bro. 594 

— loved the daughter of Don Manrique ! - Col. 156 

— may break, you may shatter the vase Moore 246 

— may relish him more in the soldier - - Sha. 887 

— might have won the poet's name - - - Ten. Ill 

— must wake and call me early - Ten. 42 ; Fav. 273 

— must wear your rue with - ■ : - : - Sha. 837 

— remember down at Florence - - - Bro. 348 

— remember Ellen ----- Moore 247 

— saw our wife was chaste, yet thoroughly Dry. 523 

— say you envy in your calm retreat - - Cra. 378 

— scarcely need my tardy thanks - Whi. 215 

— see me, lord Bassanio, where I stand - Sha. 193 

— see the slender spire that peers - - - Fav. 285 

— see this dog. It was ----- Bro. 89 

— see what shifts we are enforced to try - Dry. 511 

— shade your head - Ten. 104 

— shall comprehend all vagrom - - - Sha. 122 

— shall not be overbold ----- Erne. 200 

— shall not love me for what - Erne. 293 

— spotted snakes with double tongue - - Sha. 166 

— swore you loved me all last June - - Mer. 462 

— take my house when you - Sha. 200 

— tell me that you feel surprise - Sch. 324 

— that choose not by the view - - - Sha. 193 

— that seek what life is in death - - Byron 261 

— think they are crusaders - - - - Hoi. 10 

— told me, I remember, glory, built - - Cow. 131 

— were not at the play to-night, Don Carlos Lon. 44 

— who admire yourselves because - - - Her. 308 

— wonder that my tears should flow - - Pro. 101 

— write and think of me, my friend, with pity Pro. 258 

— yourself are much Condemned co have - Sha. 780 



Zulinez 638 

Youl, Edward. Spring song - - - - - Flo. 412 

You'll believe me, dear boys - - - . - . Hoi. 211 

— take back your Grand Duke - - - Bro. 351 
Young ardent soul graced with fair nature's Hood 165 

— bride — a wreath for thee _'_-.- Fav. 120 

— Corydon, th' unhappy shepherd swain - Vir. 17 

Young, Edward. Nature Fav. 65 

Time. (Night Thoughts.) - - - Fav. 311 

Young, Thomas, Elegy- to. (Milton.) - - Cow. 559 

Young ass, To a - - - - - - Col. 42 

— astronomer's poem, From the - - - Hoi. 188 

— Damon, Remarks on Burns 322 

— England — a sonnet ----- Wor. 441 

— firwood, A Ros. 151 

— friend, To a - - - - - - - Cow. 496 

— friend, To a - Sch. 280 

— girl's poems, The Hoi. 187 

— Hamlet, not the hesitating Dane - - Eliot 106 

— Highland rover, The — a song - - Burns 209 

— Jamie, pride of the plain — a song - - Burns 277 

— Jessica - * Moore 654 

— Jessie — a song ------ Burns 251 

— Jockey — a song Burns 227 

— lady in church, Epigram to a - - - Burns 177 

— lady on her birthday, Sonnet to - - - Cow. 483 

— lady, On the death of a - - - Byron 130 

— lady, To a Byron 142 

— lady, To a Wor. 198 

— lady, To a, on recovery from fever - - Col. 162 

— lady with poem on French revolution - Col. 39 

— lady's album, In a- Cam. 320 

— lady's album, In a - - - - Sch. 101 

— love found a dial once, in a dark shade Moore 649 

— love once lived in an humble shed - - Moore 299 

— love's first lesson is — the heart - - - Poe 154 

— man of fortune, To a - - - - - Col. 198 

— man's dream, Remarks on - - Burns 317 

— May moon, The - Moore 243 

— muleteers of Grenada - - - - Moore 657 

— Peggy — a song - Burns 197 

— queen - - - Bro. Ill 

— rose, The ------- Moore 653 

— statesman, On the - Dry. 536 

— woman, may God bless thee - Goe. 248 
Youngest daughter of Lady , To - - Rog. 339 

— For the- - Wes. 103 

Your face, my thane, is as a book - - - Sha. 791 

— hands lie open in the long fresh grass - Ros. 236 

— if is the only peacemaker - Sha. 227 

— love and pity doth the impression fill - Sha. 1041 



r> o q Youl 

"O^ Zulinez 

Your name is great in mouths - Sha. 890 

— news and your review, sir - Burns 115 

— pardon, my friend, if my rhymes did offend Byron 157 

— peaks are beautiful, ye Apennines ! - - Bry. 159 

— picture smiles as first it smiled - - - Erne. 88 

— ringlets, your ringlets ---.'- Ten. 388 

— soul was lifted by the wings to-day - - Eliot 102 
You're a milk-white panther - Mer. 234 

— welcome to despots, Dumourier - - Burns 252 
Yours of the 12th received just now - - Moore 497 

— this moment I unseal - Burns 177 
Youth. (Scott.) - Fav. 36 

— and age - Col. 213 

— and age— a sonnet - - - - - Lon. 392 

— and change, Bonnets on - Eos. 227 

— and lordship Eos. 141 

— - and Millstream — a ballad - - - Goe. 120 

— - at the brook - Sch. 112 

— - of the dark eye, wherefore didst thou call Scott 425 

— that pursuest. (E. M. Milnes.) - - - Fav. 382 
Youth's antiphony— a sonnet - - - Eos. 233 

— - spring-tribute — a sonnet - - - Ros. 233 
You've seen a pair of faithful lovers die - Dry. 517 

Youssouf - Low. 362 

Yvette, To the river Lon. 376 

Zack, Old. (Biglow papers.) - Low. 200 

Zante, To — a sonnet ----- p e 96 

Zapolya — a dramatic poem - Col. 230 

Zaragoza ! — a sonnet ----- Wor. 279 

Zarca, c. in Spanish Gypsy - Eliot 218 

Zeke crept up quite unbeknown - - Low. 156, 229 

Zenith and nadir - Sch. 248 

Zenobia. (Monkes Tale.) - Cha. 462 

Zephaniah, c. in (Edipus Tyrannus - She. 323 

Zephyr, for thy humid wing - Goe. 377 

Zephyrus Lon. 349 

Zetland fisherman song. (Pirate.) - - Scott 436 

Zeus to Hercules Bch. 228 

Zillah, c. in Cain Byron 105 

Zion - - - - Her. 197 

Zobeide," Prologue to Gol. 140 

Zounds, I was never so bethumped with words Sha. 339 

Zucca, The ------- She. 477 

Zuleika, c. in Bride of Abydos - - - Byron 15 

Zuleika. (Divan, viii.) - Goe. 376, 379 

— Nameh. (Divan, viii.) Goe. 372 

Zuleika's rose. (Byron.) ... - Flo. 99 

Zulinez, c. in Remorse ----- Col. 310 



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